Can the world come together as one to fight terrorism online?
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British Prime Minister Theresa May called for an international cooperative effort to drive terrorists off the internet. How well have other global efforts to manage the internet fared?
Who knows?
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9 juin 2017
James Tilley , University of Oxford ; Ben Williams , University of Salford ; Daniel Fitzpatrick , Aston University ; John Garry , Queen's University Belfast ; Kathryn Simpson , Manchester Metropolitan University ; Laura McAllister , Cardiff University ; Matthew Cole , University of Birmingham ; Michael Kitson , Cambridge Judge Business School ; Neil Matthews , University of Bristol ; Parveen Akhtar , Aston University ; Richard Murphy , City, University of London ; Robin Pettitt , Kingston University ; Stuart Wilks-Heeg , University of Liverpool et William McDougall , Glasgow Caledonian University
Rolling coverage of the general election results from expert academics.
After the London Bridge attack, there are calls to give the police more counter-terrorism powers.
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An outline of the ways laws to restrict the activities of terrorist suspects have evolved.
Who will be the UK’s next prime minister: incumbent Theresa May or Labour challenger Jeremy Corbyn?
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Terrorism, Brexit, Scottish independence: there is a lot going on in the UK election, and the landslide once predicted for the Conservatives is no longer a safe bet.
How each U.K. party leader would drive Brexit is the key issue on voters’ minds.
AP Photo/Matt Dunham
While security concerns have punctuated the campaign’s closing days, Brexit remains the most important issue on voters’ minds. How the EU exit is managed will matter a great deal to US interests.
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Keeping companies in the UK will be a huge task for whoever ends up in Downing Street.
The Holderness Hunt in East Yorkshire.
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If elected, Theresa May has vowed to have a fresh vote on fox hunting. This 100-year-old novel should be required reading.
Brief encounter.
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Theresa May isn’t the only national leader having a queasy election.
uhh, ummm, golly, ermmm, is it 8th June? 9th? Pass?
PA/Steve Parsons
A specialist rates the two leaders as they navigate journalistic grillings on the campaign trail.
What happened to police budgets on Theresa May’s beat at the Home Office?
Paul Rogers/The Times/PA Archive
Theresa May says they have. But let’s take a closer look.
Never the twain…
M-SUR
Is this why we are in an age of intergenerational conflict?
What is Westminster doing to MPs’ wellbeing?
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Workplaces stresses and the weight of great expectations take a toll on well-being.
Floral tributes near an an anti-Islamic State poster near Borough market, London.
AAP/Andy Rain
National security is a more complex issue in the UK these days, after a decade and a half of unpopular wars and years punctuated by regular, deadly terrorist attacks.
Merkel consider her options after meeting with Trump on May 26, 2017, in Italy.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci
For more than seven decades, US presidents have encouraged peace in Europe. Trump seems eager to toss that legacy aside. Here’s what is at stake.
PA/Gareth Fuller
Calling an election was a risk, as was opting out of the BBC live debate. And the PM may now be having some regrets.
Quite a surprising result for this man.
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With just a week until the vote, the polling agency has thrown a cat among the pigeons. Here’s how to understand the poll everyone is talking about.
Oh, the regret.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
One policy above all others will haunt the Tory election campaign to the bitter end.
Social care needs taking care of.
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Theresa May’s U-turn on social care funding shows how hard it is to fix. But there is a logical solution.
May takes the stage.
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May has clearly been extensively trained in hand gestures. Corbyn, not so much.
Safe pairs of hands?
PA/Danny Lawson
The PM will continue with her target of reducing migration to the tens of thousands, despite failing to meet it for years.