UK

Legal challenges rock British government's boats plan

UK Harvey Morris - August 30, 2023.

The essence of Britain’s unwritten constitution is that the law is whatever the majority in Parliament says it is. In practice, parliamentary supremacy is hedged around...

A cocktail of joy

UK Catriona M. Munro, TA Editor in Chief - August 28, 2023.

For some reason, The Times reported this week that the  most popular lunchtime  snack in the UK is - and has been for some decades...

How a maestro did it: Michael Parkinson and the lost art of conversation

UK Catriona M. Munro, TA Editor in Chief - August 22, 2023.

When did you last watch an interesting chat show on television? They were all the rage in the 1970’s, when middle-aged men, appeared genie-like in...

Woke: The new religion?

Globalization Catriona M. Munro, TA Editor in Chief - July 24, 2023.

Have you been to Church recently - apart from to attend weddings or funerals?  If not, you are not alone: Average Church attendance was 509,000...

Pacific Britain - the benefits of CPTPP membership go far beyond the economic benefits

UK The Editorial Board - July 17, 2023.

Admission to the Asia-Pacific free trade agreement is not only the UK's biggest trade deal after Brexit, but it is also the first significant step...

The UK: Time for a diagnosis and a prognosis

UK Catriona M. Munro, TA Editor in Chief - July 10, 2023.

Thermometers and Temperatures It’s time for a health checkup for the UK.  Seven years of political turbulence here have been marked by our leaving the European...

Libel - How litigious are you?

UK Catriona M. Munro, TA Editor in Chief - June 5, 2023.

Libel is legally defined as “in written form”, rather than slander, which is in oral form.  Libel is therefore more easy to prove.  But is...

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