Articles
- November Remove Filter
- 2015 Remove Filter
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Non-Disease Proteins Kill Brain Cells
Aggregation in brain tissue causes toxic effects similar to those linked to proteins with key roles in neurodegenerative diseases.
19 Nov 2015
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Audio: ‘Destination Europe: Reflections on the Refugee Crisis’
A 'Behind the Headlines' public discussion explored how the language of exclusion and inclusion shapes responses to the refugee crisis.
19 Nov 2015
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‘Destination Europe: Reflections on the Refugee Crisis’
A 'Behind the Headlines' public discussion explored how the language of exclusion and inclusion shapes responses to the refugee crisis.
19 Nov 2015
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Sex, Drugs and Violence in Viking Ireland
The hidden world of women in medieval Ireland was revealed at a conference organised by the School of Histories and Humanities.
17 Nov 2015
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Key Negotiators of Anglo Irish Agreement Speak at Trinity Event
Lord Robert Armstrong, Noel Dorr, Sir David Goodall and Michael Lillis were among speakers at the event organised to mark 30th anniversary of agreement.
17 Nov 2015
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Audio: Key Negotiators of Anglo Irish Agreement Speak at Trinity Event
Irish and British officials who negotiated the 1985 Anglo-Irish Agreement gathered to discuss the legacy of the historic treaty at an event to mark the 30th anniversary of the agreement.
17 Nov 2015
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2015 Nobel Prize winner in economics visits Trinity
The Student Economic Review and College Historical Society hosted the 2015 Nobel Prize Winner in Economics, Angus Deaton recently in Trinity.
17 Nov 2015
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The Blame for Paris Atrocities Rests with Attackers – not Islam
The horrific events in Paris last Friday night have presented us, once again, with the vista of so-called "Islamic terrorism", according to Neville Cox, Associate Professor, School of Law.
17 Nov 2015
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Atlantic Philanthropies Gives €138m to Tackle Dementia
The landmark award is the biggest philanthropic donation in Irish history and the largest ever received by Trinity.
17 Nov 2015
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Scientists fill in the gaps of human hunter-gatherer history
An international team led by scientists in Trinity College Dublin, University College Dublin and Cambridge University, has, for the first time, sequenced ancient genomes from the Late Upper Palaeolithic period. In doing so, the team has discovered a new strand of European hunter-gatherer ancestry.
16 Nov 2015