Peak Oil: UK Energy Security in the 21st Century

World reserves of oil are often claimed to be extensive, but statistical analysis of many oil fields reveals them to be far more mature then is claimed. In addition, OPEC declared reserves appear to have serious flaws due to economic incentives to distort submitted data. After substantiating this, the paper then addresses UK fossil fuel policies, and discusses how these can be modified to take account of the previous observations.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (4)

How Effective is UK Anti-discrimination Law?

To discuss discrimination, it is first necessary to define it. We can define discrimination in this sense as “Treatment or consideration based on class or category rather than individual merit; partiality or prejudice: racial discrimination; discrimination against foreigners” (Heritage Dictionary, 2004). As this implies, discrimination requires some form of action to be so, and usually one with a defined outcome. An example of this is the stereotypical landlord who refuses to rent property to black tenants. This is an important discrimination from prejudice, which is defined as “Irrational suspicion or hatred of a particular group, race, or religion” (Heritage Dictionary, 2004). We can therefore see that the two are likely to be related in cause but are very different in practise as it is only discrimination that causes a difference in outcome for a member of the discriminated against group - indeed it is when prejudice manifests itself in an action that it changes to being discrimination.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (1)

A Personal Language History

I (to my shame) only speak English, and have done so from birth. My language development was quite unusual in terms of most children, with initial language development from around the age of one, recognising a British Rail sign and saying the word “train, train” at around 15 months, reading child level texts (eg Meg and Mog) at 24 months, and frequently read to other children at playgroup. By the age of four, I had acquired the ability to read adult level technical texts about trains, the Arthur Ransome Swallows and Amazons series, The Hobbit and The Lord of the Rings by the time I started school. This had obvious benefits in terms of ability to reason and my vocabulary, but set me up for a certain level of conflict in normal education.

Read the rest of this entry »

Comments (3)


Design by Andreas Viklund and Converted by David Peralty and Stephen Lau, Supported by TalkXHTML.com and Powered by WordPress.