Opinion: Professional burnout – are we doing enough?
On October 10th, we honoured ‘World Mental Health Day’. This celebration should remind us that taking care of our mental wellbeing is just
The University of Exeter’s academic politics journal, run by students.
On October 10th, we honoured ‘World Mental Health Day’. This celebration should remind us that taking care of our mental wellbeing is just
There has long been debates over the topic of MP’s wages, with arguments surrounding their increase, decrease, and even removal entirely becoming a hotly contested dispute. While many believe that MPs are paid too much relative to the changes
Keir Starmer is not the great orator Neil Kinnock once was. The recent Labour Conference was the first chance Starmer had at directly
Featured Image: “File:Treasury Buildings – geograph.org.uk – 848056.jpg” from ‘Wikimedia Commons, the free media repository‘ is licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0. Link to
Recent controversy around the existence of Exeter Students for Life (ESFL), a pro-life society, has taken Exeter University by storm, with many students
There is nothing quite as divisive as talking about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, which is perhaps why many people do not explicitly voice their
Photo by NEC Corporation of America with Creative Commons license. We are all too familiar with the impact of COVID-19 on our lives, and as
It’s been 54 years since the passing of the Abortion Act 1967 under a free vote which invoked strong moral and political debate.
Featured Image: “Megan Washington: Why I live in mortal dread of public speaking | TED talk” by Jean-Jacques Halans is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA
As one of the first articles in our innovative Spotlight series, I feel obligated as the Chief Editor to focus on one of