This week we were able to give a small but vital Silverstone Scholarship grant to one of our MSc students, Eman Eltigani, a journalist from Sudan. She was thrilled to get the financial support, but bad news from her homeland soon changed the mood. Here she reports on what it’s like to be a journalist studying abroad while people struggle for freedom at home
Ruth Garland is a PhD researcher in Media and Communications at the London School of Economics, and ...
This article by Polis Summer School student Janine Eduljee As an American and someone involved in br...
While there has been much discussion of political violence in Sudan’s peripheries, less attention ha...
Posted on blog Relations International by Laura Sjoberg, an Associate Professor of Political Science...
My thesis is a collection of short stories. The stories depict the lives of four children living in ...
Studying in a world seemingly off its axis Shattering recent events like the Bastille Day in Nice, P...
As the Palestine-Israel conflict arouses strong feelings on campus, Peter Ramsay explains why we sho...
Georgette Bennett and Amin Ahmed from the Multifaith Alliance for Syrian Refugees (MFA) delivered a ...
In the year 2000, Kurt Schork, a freelance journalist working for Reuters, was killed while on assig...
In the audience of a London School of Economics panel chaired by Lakhdar Brahimi to discuss the find...
The London School of Economics and Political Science where my think-tank POLIS is based is an elite ...
Imagine that you are a young person stuck in London when your home city is engulfed in a revolution ...
[Extract from article by Ms Merle Hodges]: A recent article points to the feeling of alienation that...
This paper looks at the student protests and demands for free and deconloised education which began ...
By LSE Student Joelle Eid @joelleeid On my first day in London, at my LSE student hall in east Londo...
Ruth Garland is a PhD researcher in Media and Communications at the London School of Economics, and ...
This article by Polis Summer School student Janine Eduljee As an American and someone involved in br...
While there has been much discussion of political violence in Sudan’s peripheries, less attention ha...
Posted on blog Relations International by Laura Sjoberg, an Associate Professor of Political Science...
My thesis is a collection of short stories. The stories depict the lives of four children living in ...
Studying in a world seemingly off its axis Shattering recent events like the Bastille Day in Nice, P...
As the Palestine-Israel conflict arouses strong feelings on campus, Peter Ramsay explains why we sho...
Georgette Bennett and Amin Ahmed from the Multifaith Alliance for Syrian Refugees (MFA) delivered a ...
In the year 2000, Kurt Schork, a freelance journalist working for Reuters, was killed while on assig...
In the audience of a London School of Economics panel chaired by Lakhdar Brahimi to discuss the find...
The London School of Economics and Political Science where my think-tank POLIS is based is an elite ...
Imagine that you are a young person stuck in London when your home city is engulfed in a revolution ...
[Extract from article by Ms Merle Hodges]: A recent article points to the feeling of alienation that...
This paper looks at the student protests and demands for free and deconloised education which began ...
By LSE Student Joelle Eid @joelleeid On my first day in London, at my LSE student hall in east Londo...
Ruth Garland is a PhD researcher in Media and Communications at the London School of Economics, and ...
This article by Polis Summer School student Janine Eduljee As an American and someone involved in br...
While there has been much discussion of political violence in Sudan’s peripheries, less attention ha...