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Zero shades of grey: the death of nuance

When was the last time you viewed the content on someone else’s social media feed? Last week, I was sitting behind a man on the bus. I was on one of those raised seats, providing the perfect vantage point for a good snoop at his digital activity (I won’t make a habit of this). For…

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Oxford

Local Elections Confirmed in Oxfordshire This May

It has been confirmed that elections will be going ahead for Oxford City Council, Cherwell District Council, and West Oxfordshire District Council in May. This comes after some confusion about Oxford City Council’s stance on the postponement of local elections from May this year to May 2027, which was debated by local councillors in a…

The Oxford Union chamber.

Oxford Union Termcard Released for Hilary Term 2026

The Oxford Union has unveiled its much-anticipated termcard for Hilary Term 2026. This comes after a longer-than-usual delay to the termcard’s release, with much speculation about the term’s debates and speakers. On 22 January, the Union will be holding its first major speaker event of the term – hosting Zia Yusuf, the Head of Policy…

opinion

In defence of the assisted dying bill

My grandmother died in 2020. At the end of her life, she held on for months. Not because she wanted to — that much had become all too clear — but because her body wouldn’t let her go. My mother spent countless nights by her bedside, doing everything she could to ease what we saw…

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Source: Unknown author, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The society trap: when finding yourself becomes losing yourself

At this year’s Freshers’ Fair, I signed up for tennis and touch rugby with the unmistakable arrogance of someone who has never experienced the workload of Oxford University. We’re one term in, and both my racket and rugby boots are sitting gathering dust, while I wrestle with Lev Vygotsky in the upper reading room of…

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Department for Culture, Media and Sport, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Why I Refuse to Wear The Red Poppy

It is the 11th of November again, the date when the guns fell silent in 1918, when an armistice was signed in France marking the end of more than four years of devastating conflict.  This is why we all remember the war on November 11th with an artificial red poppy to commemorate the military personnel…

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Global Affairs

Image Credit by Evie Fairclough-Kay

Outside OX1 Week 1: Board of Peace, Uganda and Australia

A warm welcome back to Oxford! We hope everyone had a restful holiday season and is settling back into university life smoothly. If in this whirlwind week you’ve found yourself dashing around the cold streets of Oxford, running between lessons or finally catching up with long-missed friends, and haven’t been able to keep…

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Internally-displaced children in a migrant camp in Darfur, Sudan.

War and No Peace – Sudan and Civil War

Sudan gained independence from Britain in 1956. Over the 70 years since then, it has been embroiled in variations of civil war for 40. Indeed, the nation knows more war than it does peace. 2023 marked the beginning of a new conflict. Over 1000 days later, in spite of humanitarian disaster, a refugee…

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Image taken by Merna Elboghdady, used with her consent in the article. Shows the Global Youth Climate Training team at COP30.

COP30: Behind the Scenes

Elana Roberts explores the importance, impact and limitations of COP30, which took place in Brazil. She first traces the historic significance of COPs before interviewing three COP30 attendees to shed a light on their experiences and reflections. Images taken by Merna Elboghdady.

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COLUMNS

A food fair at the 626 night market at Santa Anita park (in Arcadia, California)

Risk Appetite: On London and La Belle Époque

“I can’t help but think about how, maybe in the future, I’ll look back on this experience and be wistful for the amount of times I was challenged intellectually by my peers. Maybe, paradoxically, I’ll return to Los Angeles and miss all the restaurants I tried in London” Valerie Wu reflects on the feeling of…

A girl looking out into the distance in a field

Borders and Belonging: The Politics of the “Good Immigrant”

“As a person of colour and granddaughter of an immigrant, if these experiences and the “good” immigrant rhetoric has taught me anything, it is that people will attempt to exploit my accomplishments, British accent and/or my Oxford education” Saba Ahmadzadeh Noughani examines what it means to be a “good immigrant” and how such rhetoric can…

Illustration of Oxford buildings and study materials surrounding text that reads 'Second Draft'

Second Draft: Notting Hill and table football

“I was practically raised on Richard Curtis’ oeuvre and have seen Notting Hill more times than I care to admit. I can quote unwieldy chunks of it. In fact, if the audio were to pack in, I could probably narrate the whole thing for my friends.” Eleanor Davies reflects on trying to make uni-life as…

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