UCL in the media
How to spot if a society is doomed
Professor Stephen Shennan (UCL Institute of Archaeology) is part of a study team that has identified an early warning signal of population collapse, based on European Neolithic societies.
Read: Daily MailHealth equity 'really about democracy'
Professor Sir Michael Marmot (UCL Institute of Health Equity) is interviewed about his upcoming lecture series to be broadcast on Australia's national radio about health inequality, with a particular focus on social determinants of health and factors affecting Aboriginal Australians.
Read: The AustralianJeremy Corbyn is out of touch with debate about UK austerity
Dr Paul Ormerod (UCL Psychology & Language Sciences) writes that Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn is idealistic with his spending plan and hopes of growing the economy, arguing that a key challenge will be to raise wages.
Read: City A.M.Elements: Arsenic
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) discusses the properties of arsenic.
Listen: BBC World Service 'Business Daily'Elephant in the room: teacher accountability
Professor Geeta Kingdon (UCL Institute of Education) writes that a proposed education policy for India won't go anywhere if it doesn't address teacher accountability.
Read: The Times of IndiaChina: the new space superpower
Professor Graziella Branduardi-Raymont (UCL Space & Climate Physics) comments on how the European Space Agency collaborates with China's space programme without needing to share too much information.
Read: The ObserverColombian peace deal
Professor Bulmer-Thomas (UCL Institute of Americas) discusses the ceasefire between the Colombian government and rebel group Farc.
Listen: BBC Radio 4 'World at One' (from 7 mins 14 secs)The Anthropocene epoch
Professor Chris Rapley (UCL Earth Sciences) comments on a geological group's declaration that we are in a new epoch, the Anthropocene, defined by human influence on the planet.
Read: The GuardianWhat's the most important ingredient in the perfect cup of tea?
Professor Andrea Sella (UCL Chemistry) says the characteristics of water can make a big difference to a cup of tea, as part of a radio programme led by Dr Hannah Fry (UCL Centre for Advanced Spatial Analysis).
Listen: BBC World Service 'Discovery'How 3D printing could revolutionise medicine
Dr Stephen Hilton (UCL School of Pharmacy) discusses his lab's research into how 3D-printed pharmaceuticals could impact medicine.
Read: The Times (Raconteur)