Why is your research important? Mitigating climate change is an urgency not a choice, meaning that the human race can no longer afford the luxury of fossil fuels. This can only be achieved by ...
What is next for your research? I am looking at how best to support the regional economy through innovation and entrepreneurship, with a particular focus on Neath Port Talbot in the wake of the Tata ...
Why is your research important? I work primarily on international law and climate change – so importance comes with the territory. We know that human-induced global heating is already having ...
Why is your research important? I use genetic and behavioural data to understand how animals respond to environmental change (both natural and anthropogenic). My main study species is the banded ...
Why is your research important? In today’s rapidly evolving science and technology landscape, the integration of modelling, data analytics, and artificial intelligence (AI) has become increasingly ...
Why is your research important? We are creating habitat suitability models to help inform where is best to restore seagrass. The models will indicate spatially where the conditions are most suitable ...
The ART (Access to Radiotherapy Technologies) study, published in The Lancet Oncology, has highlighted crucial gaps in access ...
A major study, the first of its kind, has revealed key insights into the extent to which children under three years old have ...
Health and Social Care Heroes is new a podcast brought to you by Swansea University, dedicated to showcasing the incredible careers available in the UK health and social care sector. Hosted by Sara ...
Raymond Williams . Raymond Williams was born on 31 August 1921 in Pandy, near Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, the only child of Henry Joseph Williams, a railway signalman, and his wif ...
Swansea University in collaboration with Carmarthenshire Sixth Forms and Seren Dyfed Academy ...
In this paper I read Raymond Williams in terms of the third space opened up by that sense of rupture: neither English, nor Welsh, perhaps, but both, and more: a compound substance, “received, made and ...