The 7/7 memorial in London.
EPA/Andy Rain
It can’t compete with the US, but the UK became part of mega-memorial culture after the London bombings.
Celebrations in full swing after the No vote.
EPA/Yannis Kolesidis
The referendum is a victory against the political class that has driven Greece to the brink, and the eurocrats who refused to help.
Audrey Hepburn photographed wearing Givenchy by Norman Parkinson, 1955.
Norman Parkinson Ltd/Courtesy Norman Parkinson Archive
She broke the stereotype and redefined style and class. Her image exuded innocence and honesty that spoke to women across generations.
The No vote won it.
EPA/Armando Babani
July 5, 2015
Costas Milas , University of Liverpool ; George Kyris , University of Birmingham ; James Arvanitakis , Western Sydney University ; Marianna Fotaki , Warwick Business School, University of Warwick ; Nikos Papastergiadis , The University of Melbourne ; Remy Davison , Monash University ; Richard Holden , UNSW Sydney ; Ross Buckley , UNSW Sydney , and Sofia Vasilopoulou , University of York
Academic experts respond to the No vote in Greece’s referendum on whether or not to accept a bailout offer from their international creditors.
In trouble.
EPA/Yannis Kolesidis
Greece is set to become the first advanced economy to default on the IMF in its 71-year history.
Alexis Tsipras has called a referendum of Greece’s bailout offer.
EPA/Simela Pantzartzi
Austerity has crippled the Greek economy and Greek society. To accept more is a decision that should be given to the Greek people.
François Hollande addresses the press at the Elysée Palace.
EPA/Etienne Laurent
Cuts to surveillance and questions about French values were problem even before the attack near Lyon.
Head to head.
EPA/Julien Warnand
What you need to know about the IMF and its approach to negotiations over a Greek bailout.
Rom-com with a twist?
Curzon
The recently released Les Combattants is just the latest addition to a fast-expanding body of Hollywood-style rom-coms to come out of France.
Is a person more than their brain?
Shutterstock
The science behind an Italian doctor’s plans to give a man a whole new body might be advanced, but philosophers have been asking what makes a person for centuries.
What is Greece all about? Bearded philosophers? Caryatids? Spartans?
Sorin Colac/Shutterstock.com
Our current turn towards ancient Greece touches on a fundamental nerve in modern society.
The end of privacy?
Shutterstock
Israel is suspected of spying on Iran’s nuclear talks using a virus to hack the devices that are all around us.
Napoleon’s step-daughter Hortense and his second wife Marie-Louise.
Two centuries on, the history of the battle and our understanding of it should by no means be a predominantly male affair.
He who shoots first gets frozen longest.
lrosa
If frogs can freeze and live to tell the tale, why can’t humans?
Just you wait.
BBC/Mammoth Screen/Mike Hogan
There’s much more to the naked male bodies of these programmes than the simple titillation that meets the eye.
The sun is setting on UK wind power – or is that a new dawn?
Ian Britton
The proposed Energy Bill ends wind power subsidies and toughens planning regulations. But it’s not all bad news for the industry.
The Plumb-Pudding in Danger: The greatest political cartoon ever.
From a vertically challenged Napoleon to a drunken prince, James Gillray inspired cartoonists for centuries.
Women at the top of their game.
Danny Lawson/PA
For every woman at the peak of the academic ladder there are many others who have been left behind.
Vive la Résistance.
EPA/Philippe Wojazer
When he interred four anti-racist and secularist icons in Paris’s Panthéon, François Hollande perhaps hoped some of their legacy would rub off on him.
She speaks.
Russell Boyce/POOL/EPA
May 27, 2015
Helen Fenwick , Durham University ; Alex Nurse , University of Liverpool ; Andrew Street , University of York ; Anya Ahmed , University of Salford ; Arman Sarvarian , University of Surrey ; Benjamin Bowman , University of Bath ; Caitlin McLean , Glasgow Caledonian University ; Imran Awan , Birmingham City University ; Katharine Jones , Coventry University ; Michael Emerson , Centre for European Policy Studies ; Michael Jopling , Northumbria University, Newcastle ; Peter Lynch , University of Stirling ; Prem Sikka , University of Essex ; Roy Sainsbury , University of York , and Stephen Roper , Warwick Business School, University of Warwick
Academic experts break down the bills in the Queen’s speech and get to grips with the new Conservative government’s agenda.