Benefits by the barrel
09 April 2011Countries rich in oil have long been associated with the "resource-curse paradox" - a principle which states they will suffer, rather than benefit, in the...
Research
Countries rich in oil have long been associated with the "resource-curse paradox" - a principle which states they will suffer, rather than benefit, in the...
Siblings, and even sibling rivalry, can have a positive effect on children’s early development and their ability to form social relationships later in life, according...
The power of “scriptural reasoning” to transform the way in which different faiths understand one another is to be the subject of a major lecture...
Brain scans of teenage boys with severe antisocial behaviour have revealed differences in the structure of the developing brain.
A Cambridge University archaeologist, along with two other researchers in Guernsey, has uncovered a previously unseen archive featuring the testimonies of people who were deported...
Chinese food contains a hidden recipe for living, a new analysis reveals.
The last volume of the expedition newspaper, South Polar Times, written by the men waiting for news of Captain Scott’s return from the South Pole...
Cambridge University glaciologist Professor Julian Dowdeswell has spent three years of his life in the polar regions.
Research into the epic chronicling the adventures of the legendary Swahili ruler, Fumo Liyongo, has revealed messages that reach far beyond myth-history.
Funded by a £20 million donation from David Harding, the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability aims to address some of the major challenges...