Admissions
Online Screening: the inconvenient truth
Far fewer applicants now find themselves in the cold corridors of medieval quads
Troubling Admissions
According to their own statistics, almost one in five Oxford students are disabled.
The article Cherwell killed
Higher education must stop excluding disagreement
Most Read
Gary Stevenson is wrong about wealth taxes
The popular economist is irritating, but more importantly he is mistaken
Why they hated Ann Widdecombe
Fair-minded people could agree or disagree with her opinions. Left-wing bigots hated her for not abandoning them
What is wrong now was wrong before
Julia Gillard should not pretend that the “unintended consequences” of the gender debate were unknowable
Ethnic minorities are abandoning Labour
It is not just Muslim voters who have been abandoning the Labour Party
A bloodless account of blood-soaked times
Athens and Sparta: The Rivalry That Shaped Ancient Greece by Adrian Goldsworthy
Campaigners should let assisted suicide go
There is no principled case for using the Parliament Acts to squeeze through assisted suicide
A day out at Unite the Kingdom
Tommy Robinson’s latest demonstration was a peculiarly hammy affair
Sex, success and failure
Sarah Ditum talks with songwriter Neil Hannon of The Divine Comedy
Is our law praiseworthy?
In connection with civil liberties, British law is at its lowest ebb
Fair vs free elections
The grey zone between interference and counter-interference is becoming Europe’s new political frontier
The cost of equal outcomes
By treating disparities in mental health detention as evidence of racism, the NHS is sacrificing safety
Who wants to be a patriotic millionaire?
More taxation will not solve our economic woes
Kemi always gets it right
Whatever the crisis, the Conservative leader invariably discovers that events have vindicated her.
The centre-left is out of ideas
The new journal Arguably barely makes an argument
