UCL in the media
Emmanuel Macron backed by Manuel Valls
Professor Philippe Marlière (UCL School of European Languages, Culture & Society) speaks to The World Tonight about the forthcoming French presidential elections.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'The World Tonight' (from 22 mins 35 secs)London exhibition elevates selfies as an art form
Professor Daniel Miller (UCL Anthropology) is interviewed about the culture around 'selfies'.
Read: ReutersWarming drives Alaskan glacier to its lowest point in 900 years
Professor Chris Rapley (UCL Earth Sciences) comments on how a temperature increase of less than 2°C is sufficient to destabilise a glacier.
Read: New Scientist (£)Food trade drains global water sources at 'alarming' rates
A study led by Dr Carole Dalin (UCL Bartlett School of Environment, Energy & Resources) found that the global food trade is depleting water sources in much of the world at a far faster rate than they can be replenished.
Read: BBC News, More: Daily MailArticle 50 special
Dr Uta Staiger (UCL European Institute) comments on how Britons perceive the rest of Europe, as Brexit negotiations get underway.
Watch: BBC Two 'Newsnight' (from 4 mins 15 secs)Central European University fights for survival in Hungary
Professor Simon Marginson (UCL Institute of Education) is quoted saying the Central European University could be the first international university to become "a victim of the new 'closed' brand of nationalism."
Read: THEThe Brexit negotiation to come
Tim Oliver (UCL Political Science) writes about how it will be challenging for the UK and the EU to reach a deal that works well for both parties.
Read: Wall Street Journal (£)A guide to the Exomars rover's camera
Professor Andrew Coates (UCL Mullard Space Science Laboratory) explains how the European Space Agency's ExoMars rover will use the PanCam, led by the UCL MSSL, to search for life on Mars.
Watch: BBC NewsBrexit negotiations: what does Europe want?
Dr Uta Staiger (UCL European Institute) writes about how Brexit negotiations will not only depend on what the UK pursues, but will also be subject to the priorities and red lines of all 27 EU member states.
Read: The ConversationSidelining planners makes for poorer urban policy
Jenny McArthur (UCL Science, Technology, Engineering & Public Policy) writes that moves to restrict the work of urban planners are short-sighted and come with long-term social and environmental risks.
Read: The Conversation