A thought-provoking piece of research led to this article, written by Dunzhu Li and Yunhong Shi, from Trinity’s School of Engineering.
Opinion
Norway’s Supreme Court set to rule on whether the country can keep searching for new Arctic oil
Trinity’s Alexandru Gociu and Suryapratim Roy discuss an important upcoming case with huge implications for Norway and the countries that import its oil.
Is reaching zero COVID-19 possible?
Kingston Mills, Professor of Experimental Immunology at Trinity, asks one of the most pertinent questions facing the world today in a piece originally published by The Conversation.
Trinity’s 1641 Depositions a game-changer for genealogy-hunters
Celebrating its tenth birthday, the 1641 Depositions Project provides a unique window into everyday life in 17th-century Ireland, writes Professor Micheál ó Siochrú
Plant diversity makes West Africa’s shea trees bear more fruit
Aoife Delaney, from Trinity’s School of Natural Sciences, explains how ecosystem services provided by tree and shrub diversity support the well-being of millions of people in West Africa.
Behind a smokescreen: State-owned companies complicate the global fight against tobacco use??
Efforts to curb tobacco have been thwarted in part because half the global cigarette industry is controlled by countries who are part of those efforts, writes Daniel Malan in the South China Morning Post?
From psychopaths to ‘everyday sadists’: why do humans harm the harmless?
Simon McCarthy-Jones, Associate Professor in Clinical Psychology and Neuropsychology at Trinity, asks one of life’s most curious questions in an article published by The Conversation.
New Dublin on screen – a place of freedom and choice
Ruth Barton, Head of School of Creative Arts writes how Dublin’s screen history reflects its real-life contradictions in this article published by The Conversation.
How tech billionaires’ visions of human nature shape our world
Trinity’s Associate Professor in Clinical Psychology and Neuropsychology, Simon McCarthy-Jones, writes his latest thought-provoking piece, first published by The Conversation.
Irish business can do more to protect human rights defenders
Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders, and adjunct professor at the Centre for Social Innovation, Trinity Business School, says business should help protect human rights defenders