Alamy/ Ianni Dimitrov Pictures
The schools inspectorate’s policies about language are harmful to the most marginalised members of society.
Universities across the world hold massive amounts of land.
Llee_wu/Flickr
New research shows that universities could offset carbon by changing some of their land to woodlands and meadows.
Views of the Yorkshire Dales seem idyllic but farmers are dealing with economic and environmental problems.
albinoni/Shutterstock
British countryside management needs a new co-ordinated approach, a researcher argues.
Andy Rain/EPA-EFE
Hospitalisations aren’t rising in the steep manner that prompted previous lockdowns despite the high current caseload.
Coastal communities are likely to be hardest hit by climate change.
Florence Halstead
In a region threatened by coastal erosion, a group of school students learned how they could explore change using visual stories and poems.
In England, children were seen as a way to replenish the military and sustain the economy.
Universal Images Group via Getty Images
Go back to 17th- and 18th-century England and France and you’ll see the same sort of handwringing over birthrates that we’re seeing today.
The England team’s Euro 2020 was full of moments the country should be proud of.
Sportimage/Alamy
Euro 2020 was full of successes for this team, we shouldn’t forget that.
Mural of England player Marcus Rashford with messages of support plastered over racist abuse following Euros 2020.
PA Images/Alamy
Studying the team over the past 25 years has provided clues as to why it’s plagued with issues of racism and hooliganism
The England team reassure Marcus Rashford after he misses a penalty.
Laurence Griffiths/Pool
England has often seen itself as a sporting underdog, it’s time that changed.
An Anglo-Saxon burial mound in Taplow Court, England.
(Shutterstock)
New analysis of Anglo-Saxon skulls suggests that being an Anglo-Saxon was a matter of language and culture, and not genetics.
A 16-year-old’s academic performance impacts their future outcomes on every level, educational, professional and emotional.
Jim Wileman / Alamy Stock Photo
The data shows that attainment gaps in English education at age 16 cannot be attributed to any single factor.
Alamy/Neil Juggins
Who is up and who is down after a bumper crop of votes.
Nicola Sturgeon thinks she’s found the exit.
EPA/Robert Perry
Nicola Sturgeon wants Scotland out, Boris Johnson hopes to hold it all together and Mark Drakeford believes in the best of both worlds.
Only time for one scoop on the campaign trail in Wales.
Alamy/Matthew Horwood
From councils to devolved parliaments, a bumper crop of contests is happening on the same day.
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England is voting for metro mayors and councils on May 6 at a crucial time for local decision-making.
Reuters/Alamy
We studied shared values within England and found an even larger gulf between Northerners and Southerners than we did between English and Scots.
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It takes time and money to hold an election safely during the coronavirus pandemic.
Shoppers in Leeds walk by a coronavirus alert signe.
PA/Danny Lawson
Counties, local authorities, councils – how you divvy up the map changes the game significantly.
Much of the north has been placed in the strictest tier of coronavirus restrictions.
Danny Lawson/PA
The answer could be found in death rates among the elderly.
Andy Burnham has been in a war of words with central government.
PA/Jacob King
History shows that revenge is a dish often served cold in Westminster.