At Durham University, we conduct innovative and impactful research to transform lives and make a difference, globally and locally. We are dedicated to pursuing social justice, undertaking fearless research that leads to policy and societal change and reform.
In social sciences and health, we have leading voices in the investigation of violence and abuse, climatology and urban sustainability, anthropology, where we span social, evolutionary and health anthropology, and archaeology, including the protection of heritage in the face of humanitarian or environmental crisis.
Discover more from our Social Sciences research community.
Cracks in Greenland Ice Sheet growing more rapidly
Dr Tom Chudley, in our Department of Geography, led a new large-scale study of crevasses – wedge-shaped fractures or cracks – on the world’s second largest body of ice. They found crevasses had significantly increased in size and depth at the fast-flowing edges of the Greenland ice sheet over the five years between 2016 and 2021 – meaning the increases are happening more quickly than previously detected.
Helping change law on sexually explicit deepfakes
Creating a sexually explicit deepfake is set to become a criminal offence in the UK, thanks in part to the work of a leading Durham law professor Clare McGlynn. While it was already a criminal offence to share sexual deepfakes – digitally altered images and videos where someone’s likeness is superimposed into pornography - creating them wasn’t. That will now change after the UK Government said it would adopt a proposal drafted by Professor McGlynn and Baroness Charlotte Owen to ensure the new law is comprehensive and consent-based.
Will Donald Trump be ranked as a great president? Here’s what the research tells us
Presidential “greatness” is a difficult thing to define, although many people have tried. Research on the role of US presidents has attempted to define how previous presidents rank compared to their peers. There is general agreement that the United States has had three truly great presidents and several truly terrible presidents. But what makes these presidents great or terrible, and how will President Trump end up ranking compared to other US presidents? Associate Professor in US Politics, David Andersen, explores more.