Politicians who fanned these flames should hang their heads in shame.
Time and again we've seen this story play out. Single incidents used to fuel a far right narrative - and communities across the nation paying the price.
Mark Carney’s AI strategy suggests Canadians’ concerns about AI will evaporate if they become more “literate” about the technology.
In trying to boost industry, Carney ignores many of the biggest concerns about generative AI and data centres. If anyone needs to become more AI literate, it’s him.
The public is right to be concerned about AI. But Carney and his ministers have framed our reluctance as ignorance.
Depressing news out of Belfast this week, but for anyone interested in learning more about loyalism, conflict, and culture war my new book 'Performing Paramilitarism' gives an ethnographic account of what's driving some of this stuff: global.oup.com/academic/pro...
Zack Polanski
Paris Marx
Compare and contrast the journalism. And they wonder why their subscription model does not work. www.ft.com/content/bbdf...
If "go back where you came from" is now policy, Indigenous peoples would like to formally invoke it.
We're also open to a swap: your migrants for the contents of your museums. Straight exchange, no refunds.
More importantly, why is this the stupid timeline?
global.oup.com
My favorite policy book of the year is Reform as Process (Columbia University Press 2026) by Martin Williams from Michigan.
I wrote a post on why I think this book deserves a wide audience, including scholars, students, and practitioners.
jaeyeonkim.substack.com/p/my-favorit...
*demonstrators*
Two years after the post-Southport riots and we still don't have the legal tools to confront the owner of the most influential social media platform as he encourages mass disorder.
Far right politicians foment violence and the national broadcaster amplifies them.
These are all choices.