A cure for Aids? Future funding vital to achieve major advances
As President Obama pulls out of a major Aids conference in the US, Health and Social Care Correspondent Victoria Macdonald considers the impact.
764 items found
As President Obama pulls out of a major Aids conference in the US, Health and Social Care Correspondent Victoria Macdonald considers the impact.
The British government accepts for the first time at the high court that three elderly Kenyans were tortured under the colonial administration half a century ago.
A new set-top box has been unveiled by Lord Alan Sugar today with the backing of the BBC, ITV, and Channels 4 and 5.
It’s that time of year again when thousands of people swarm to SW19 and Wimbledon becomes a hive of activity for two weeks of action-packed tennis.
You can’t hold down a top job and have a family: that’s the conclusion of former US State Department policy chief Anne Marie Slaughter – who’s sparked a fierce debate about ‘having it all’.
What is it about sepia or black-and-white? Instantly we’re transported back in time, writes Channel 4 News International Editor Lindsey Hilsum.
Channel 4 News wins the best commentary/blogging prize at the Online Media Awards for FactCheck – the blog which keeps the powerful in check and politicians on their toes.
The Hillsborough Independent Panel has come up with a date, and today announced that it will relase all the documentation relating to the 1989 football disaster in Liverpool on 12 September. Someone who has been following the panel’s work very closely tells me that the revelations which come out of the documents will be “immense” and “very significant”. As to why, my source wouldn’t be drawn.
The Culture Secretary Jeremy Hunt has suggested setting up a new state-subsidised arts channel on digital TV, to bring live performances to a wider audience.
Despite the controversial dissolution of parliament, voting begins in presidential elections in Egypt. But what does the situation mean for the country’s transition process?
Websites will be given greater protection from being sued if they help to identify people posting defamatory messages on the internet – known as “trolls” – under government plans.
Why has the Bank of England decided against printing more money despite a recession in Britain, an intensification of the eurocrisis and advice from the IMF that now is the time to act?
Rarely-viewed records showing who served Britain’s kings and queens will today be made available online for the first time.
Paul Krugman’s new book challenges the consensus view of deficit cutting. Channel 4 News’s Neil Macdonald looks at the economist’s call for a return to the ideas of John Maynard Keynes.
Scores of Sri Lankans, due to have been deported from the UK on a government charter flight on Thursday afternoon, have had their removal orders overturned by high court judges.