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Studies have shown that highlighting individual responsibility isn’t quite as effective as it seems
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With the third national lockdown under way, how can E.M. Forster’s neglected masterpiece help us survive the next few months?
Finding common ground.
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What the largest study of diversity attitudes found from a survey of 11,000 adults in England and Wales in 2020.
Moral combat: Do you wear a face mask to show you care about others? Or do you refuse because you believe they defy human nature?
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Here’s how governments can get more people to follow COVID-19 guidelines.
Is it a lovely autumn day, or is America burning to the ground?
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Mexican philosophers have a word for the peculiar anxiety you may be feeling: ‘zozobra,’ a dizziness that arises from social disintegration.
Nigerian youths are often stereotyped and harassed by the police for being in possession of a laptop or iPhone.
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They are often framed as lazy and fraudulent and are constantly harassed by the police. Now, it seems they have had enough. We explore what it takes to be a young Nigerian living in Nigeria.
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Without Black Lives Matter the promise of true multiculturalism will continue to remain something of a pipe-dream.
A scene depicting the jatilan dance in November 1828 .
In a chapter of my latest book, I highlight some of Indonesia’s most innovative and culturally significant films and directors over the past 70 years.
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Once something bound up with other people, more recently ‘happiness’ is seen as something very individual. Has our dependence on each other during lockdown changed our sense of where happiness lies?
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While some women may be actively involved in choosing their marital name, taking the man’s name remains the norm.
PA/Jacob King
Survey data shows British people continue to hold racist views and that minorities continue to face discrimination when applying for jobs.
An albino child and his mother get a visual test as part of programmes to expand social awareness for albino people in Lagos, Nigeria.
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It’s important to unravel how disability is understood as a step towards improving the well-being of disabled people.
Different mindsets about rules can lead to different behaviors.
AP Photo/Lynne Sladky
The divide transcends partisan bickering. Some people really do recoil at the imposition of strict rules, while others become anxious when rules aren’t followed.
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The psychology behind a sense of togetherness during the pandemic.
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Boris Johnson’s assertion is based on a much misunderstood claim by Margaret Thatcher that there’s no such thing as society, but many sociologists would agree with her.
Tsala Tandu, 58, continues to drive the number 12 bus through central London during the lockdown.
EPA/Andy Rain
The government should consider whether some of its policies will make inequalities worse.
What this says about masculinity.
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Coronavirus reveals how macho stereotypes like toughness, aggression and control can create harm.
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This year’s twin crises have left Australians reeling. The concept of ‘rupture’ can help us understand what’s happening.
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History shows us that when police forces apply the rules unevenly, some groups are hit harder than others.
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Despite both parents now being at home, the likelihood is that much of the ‘domestic’ work will still land squarely on the shoulders of the women of the house.