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Academic perspectives from Cambridge University Press

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The Cambridge Handbook of Digital Evidence in Criminal Investigations

The age of electronic evidence: challenges and the need for cooperation of service providers In today’s digital age, where information and communication technologies have revolutionised how we communicate,...

Stanisław Tosza, Vanessa Franssen | 6 Mar 2025

Whose Rights? Whose Duties? Private Actors in the Constitutional Order

Who is responsible for your constitutional rights? The traditional answer is that constitutions create obligations for the state. So, state or government actors are responsible for upholding rights, from...

Christina R. Bambrick | 5 Mar 2025

Adolescent Voice: The Intersection of Technology and Participatory Health Research

I got my first mobile phone when I was 18 years old. Internet at my time still made this annoying sound trying to connect from the phoneline, that somebody else needed every time you were doing something...

Leonor Rodriguez-Estrada | 5 Mar 2025

Creative use of prior, likelihood and posterior distributions to develope dependence models using hierarchical structures

Bayes’ Theorem started as a way of obtaining conditional probabilities via the reversed conditionals and thus was called law of inverted probabilities. However, the Bayesian statistical theory uses...

Luis E. Nieto-Barajas | 5 Mar 2025

What Does Literature Have to Do with Political Thought? Moses and the Formation of the Pentateuch

The wilderness narrative, the story at the heart of the Torah, or Pentateuch, follows the Israelites from Egypt to Canaan—from enslavement, to liberation, to independence. In an important sense, though,...

Angela Roskop Erisman | 4 Mar 2025

Cambridge Handbook on Algorithmic Price Personalization and the Law

Fabrizio and Mateusz live in the same jurisdiction. They enter the same website at the same time, search for the same product, but each person pays a different price. They each paid a personalized price. Will...

Mateusz Grochowski, Fabrizio Esposito | 3 Mar 2025

The Shamanism of Eco-Tourism

How did Indigenous people in the New World understand their encounters with Europeans during the colonial era? This question is at the centre of ongoing debates among anthropologists and historians and...

James Andrew Whitaker | 27 Feb 2025

Back to the Phalanstery: The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature

When the editors of The New Cambridge History of Russian Literature first contacted me with a request to serve on the volume’s advisory council, they promised that their demands on my time would be...

Eric Naiman | 27 Feb 2025

The EU Law on Crypto-Assets

In our new book “The EU Law on Crypto-Assets” (Cambridge University Press, 2025, 560pp), we discuss the EU’s regulatory responses to the rapidly growing area of crypto-assets, framed against challenges...

Jannik Woxholth, Dirk Zetzsche | 26 Feb 2025

Defining Darwinism

In late 2024 Cambridge University Press published two surveys of the history of evolutionism, Michael Ruse’s Charles Darwin: No Revel, Great Revolutionary and my own Darwin for the People. Michael passed...

Peter J. Bowler | 25 Feb 2025

The struggle against a German word…and why Germans have never stopped saying it

Scholars have often looked at cultures through the lens of their “keywords”– terms allegedly so unique as to be untranslatable. In German-speaking countries, one six-letter word has particularly...

Jeremy DeWaal | 24 Feb 2025

Oh, I never knew that

On 15 October 2024 I attended the UK premiere of Joy at the Royal Festival Hall — part of the 68th annual British Film Institute gala sponsored by Cunard.  Directed by Ben Taylor and produced by...

Fiona Kisby Littleton | 18 Feb 2025