Can the British high street reinvent itself?
As Britain’s economy gradually hauls itself back to growth, Siobhan Kennedy hits the high street in Swindon to find out if locals think it can reinvent itself.
225 items found
The traditional family model used to be thought of as the building block of society. But now a report finds those families make up a third of all those with children who live in poverty.
Thousands of tonnes of saturated fat are to be cut out of a range of foods, from Kit Kats to breadsticks, a government pledge says – but concerns are raised that the plan does not go far enough.
Tesco wasted 28,500 tonnes of food in the first six months of this year, it reveals – with almost two-thirds of all bagged salad sold disposed of by the supermarket and its customers.
The British Red Cross is teaming up with a food bank charity to help feed thousands of vulnerable people across the UK who are struggling to cope in the harsh economic climate.
Despite some sectors embracing the so called living wage to tackle poverty in the UK, Channel 4 News finds that some workers are still being left behind.
As Britain’s economy gradually hauls itself back to growth, Siobhan Kennedy hits the high street in Swindon to find out if locals think it can reinvent itself.
The British high street is back in business, says a new survey – but is it full of charity shops and discount stores? We’re trying to find out as #c4newspopup tours Britain this week. You tell us!
The number of Romanians and Bulgarians working in the UK has risen by more than a quarter in three months, official figures reveal.
As the Irish Sun breaks with tradition and scraps page three, UK lads mags are facing an identity crisis with dropping sales and ultimatums from supermarkets.
From check-ins to checkouts – easyJet founder Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou is setting up a budget supermarket chain to take on the might of cut-price grocery giants Aldi and Lidl.
As Nuts magazine hits back at the Co-operative’s “ultimatum” to give lads’ magazines six weeks to cover up or else be taken off the shelves, Channel 4 News asks if other supermarkets will follow suit.
The Church of England should show “moral leadership” and consider pulling its money out of Google to persuade it to block illegal images of child abuse, says MP Claire Perry.
A story of business success at a car components plant in the Midlands – as George Osborne hails a revovery and says he is determined to stick to his economic plan.
It’s official: temperatures over 24 degrees improve our mood, say experts in mood analysis. Channel 4 News looks at why heatwaves make us happy.
Meat from diseased cattle that tests positive for bovine tuberculosis has been sold for human consumption by Defra, the food and farming ministry says.