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Communications

 

Opinion: Rape, murder, forced marriage: what girls in conflict zones get instead of education

Pauline Rose (Faculty of Education) discusses the importance of recognising education as part of a humanitarian response.

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Opinion: Dear young people: here’s why you need to vote in the EU referendum

Catherine Barnard (Faculty of Law) discusses why it's so important that young people vote in the EU referendum.

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Genes discovered that enable birds to produce the colour red

Latest research suggests a new mechanism for how sexual displays of red beaks and plumage might be ‘honest signals’ of mate quality, as genes that convert yellow dietary pigments into red share cofactors with enzymes that aid detoxification – hinting that redness is a genetic sign of the ability to better metabolise...

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Support from family and friends important to help prevent depression in teenagers

The importance of friendships and family support in helping prevent depression among teenagers has been highlighted in research from the University of Cambridge. The study, published in the open access journal PLOS ONE , also found that teenagers who had grown up in a difficult family environment were more likely than...

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Opinion: Here’s what people in their 90s really think about death

Jane Fleming (Department of Public Health and Primary Care) discusses attitudes to death among the very old.

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First evidence of icy comets orbiting a sun-like star

Astronomers have found the first evidence of comets around a star similar to the sun, providing an opportunity to study what our solar system was like as a ‘baby’.

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Opinion: Uber should take its lead from Thomas Cook’s battle with Victorian Britain

Christian Hampel (Cambridge Judge Business School) discusses Thomas Cook travel agency's battle with Victorian Britain's status quo.

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How the brain controls what we eat

Dr Giles Yeo will present a BBC Horizon programme in the summer on the science of obesity and is speaking about his research at the Hay Festival.

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The man we love to hate: it’s time to reappraise Thomas Robert Malthus

Thomas Robert Malthus, who was born 250 years ago, became notorious for his ‘principle of population’. He argued that, because poverty was inevitable, some people would not find a seat at ‘nature’s table’ and would perish. In a new book, historians at Cambridge and Harvard set the life and work of this contentious thinker...

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Sexual transmission involved in tail-end of Ebola epidemic

Some of the final cases of Ebola in Sierra Leone were transmitted via unconventional routes, such as semen and breastmilk, according to the largest analysis to date of the tail-end of the epidemic.

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