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Fifteen Eighty Four

Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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Are we only a dream the bacteria are having?

Daoist philosopher Zhuangzi once wondered if he might be a dream that a butterfly was having. A couple of millennia later, a biologist asks a similar question in Greg Bear’s novel Vitals (2002). “Larger...

Liliane Campos | 26 Mar 2026

Piecing Together Market Regulation and Private Law: The Reconciliation Puzzle

We live in an age of grand challenges, from climate change and the digitalisation of markets to rising inequality. Yet legal systems struggle to respond effectively, constrained by entrenched disciplinary...

Olha O. Cherednychenko | 26 Mar 2026

The Fraying Bonds of Peace

As we live through the transformation of the post-Cold War international order, politicians, diplomats, and scholars have fastened upon the pre-First World War era as a guide to what might emerge in its...

William Mulligan | 26 Mar 2026

Beyond the “Black Years”: Jewish Life in Soviet Moldavia after the Holocaust

When historians write about Jews in the Soviet Union during Stalin’s final years, the story is often framed almost entirely through repression. The destruction of the Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee,...

Diana Dumitru | 25 Mar 2026

Why are we so resistant to change?

If change is necessary and beneficial, why is it sometimes so slow, and fiercely resisted? When and how do people, groups, and movements bring about system change?  These are the ideas we explore...

Susilo Wibisono, Kiara Minto, Gi K. Chonu, Winnifred Louis | 25 Mar 2026

Morality and Political Communication

Political arguments often appeal to fundamental moral intuitions about right and wrong. Politicians highlight the moral basis of their views and positions. For example, in the context of the recent U.S....

Jae-Hee Jung | 23 Mar 2026

A just image

We use images to immortalize precious moments, to document how we see the world and how others should see it, and to construct imaginations of how the world ought to be. In the book Seeing Matters,...

Sarah Awad | 20 Mar 2026

Not a Robot Judge: What AI Is Really Doing to Civil Justice

When people hear about artificial intelligence in justice, they often imagine a dystopian future in which a “robot judge” decides cases, replaces lawyers, and turns justice into a cold, automated...

Marco Giacalone | 19 Mar 2026

The Era of Florence Price

Samantha Ege: The Cambridge Companion to Florence B. Price is the book I needed when I was a student. Cambridge Companions were always my go-to during my studies because they do such a brilliant job at...

Samantha Ege, Alexandra Kori Hill | 19 Mar 2026

Language, Justice and Conference Dinners

This week we are celebrating the release of our brand new edited collection, ‘Language and Justice’. You may already have heard of the academic areas of ‘language and law’ and ‘forensic linguistics’,...

Tatiana Grieshofer, Kate Haworth | 17 Mar 2026

Critical Realism in Applied Linguistics

In the 1950s, research on language learning was dominated by behaviourism, which viewed language as a system of linguistic rules and patterns. Learners were encouraged to imitate and memorise words and...

Karin Zotzmann, Jérémie Bouchard | 17 Mar 2026

English Linguistics and the Age of Data: How Digitalization Is Rewriting the Rules

English linguistics is in the middle of a transformation. That’s nothing new. This field has always been quick to adapt, but the current shift may be different in scale. It mirrors the broader digitalization...

Mikko Laitinen, Paula Rautionaho | 16 Mar 2026