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Publications


On Being Young, Dumb, and Revolutionary by Quetzalli Carrera-López
During my first year, when the war in Gaza had just begun, I ditched studying for an awfully scary midterm to protest Utrecht University’s ties with Israel. I was charged with a need to scream for justice, for what is right. And at dinner, this feeling carried itself into the conversation between my unitmate and me. She told me that student protests were fruitless, and went on to say that the Israeli-Palestinian “conflict” would not be solved by a mildly recognized university
22 de mar.


Diversity Initiative to Uplift the Straight Cisgender Male Experience By Aralyn Perelli-Harris
Fostering diversity is a truly aspirational goal, one that UCU seeks to strive for as its highest value. Diversity helps us understand different perspectives and consider those that were previously unheard before, or are marginalized in spaces of academia. In order to encourage a better understanding of often-silenced voices on the UCU campus, it is important to gain awareness of the challenges facing straight cisgender men in the Liberal Arts and Sciences, due to the recent
22 de mar.


Running at UCU! by Caitlin Roeltgen
Running can suck. But it can also feel fantastic. And it’s almost always both. The positive effects of running make it impactful, not just in theory, but also on campus. Current first-year student at UCU, Camille Grenot, has been running for two years. “I got into it a few years ago, and I’ve been hooked to the progress that you see,” Camille explained to me. It can take weeks for a less active person to get into running shape, but even for someone with a strong aerobic base
22 de mar.


Constructive CriticismCo by Anonymous
In a sea of UCU committee events, I am an undercover committee event hater. This is controversial, coming from someone who nearly sweated through all their clothes going to their own committee interview, but I stand by it. Don’t get me wrong, I appreciate the occasional post from UCU Confessions and the random UCU horses account that just popped up, but I sometimes find the rest to be a little performative. By the rest, I mean committees that are going through World War 3 wit
22 de mar.


What Australia Leaves Out by Nuala Weening
After dozens of tentative introductions and polite small talk during the first semester, phrases like “What’s your name?” and “Where are you from?” remain engraved in my mind. Had they not already guessed from my accent, I would smile and respond: Australia. Almost invariably, the next question would follow: “Why would you leave?” The Australia in people’s minds is idyllic – perfect, even. A never-ending Summer of scorching beach days, crackling campfires, and the smell of si
22 de mar.


USAID Cuts: How One Decision May Lead To 14 Million Deaths by André Barros
In February 2025, the Trump administration made the decision to cut roughly 90% of USAID’s current contracts and programmes, amounting to around 60 billion dollars. The main argument that Donald Trump and, at the time, Elon Musk, used to justify the cuts was that helping other nations in need was not the priority of the United States, asserting Trump’s “America First” nationalist policy. A study now reports that the impact of the administration’s decision might lead to 14 mil
22 de mar.


The Skincare Industry Is a Guilt Trap by Marline Brink
‘So, you have acne? Maybe you should try washing your face sometime, or drink more water, or buy an unaffordable skincare product!’ Maybe you’ve also heard this annoying type of advice before. This may be because the quality of our skin has become increasingly important in recent years. The skincare industry has skyrocketed, make-up styles have become more simplistic, and the ‘clean girl,’ with natural, effortless beauty has become the new ideal. Perfect skin is another entry
22 de mar.


Acumulando Experiencias: How we stop being amazed by things by Marina Marián Rodrigo
In early January 2026, heavy snowfall and icy conditions affected large parts of the Netherlands, prompting weather alerts across several provinces. The snow brought widespread disruption: long traffic tailbacks, hazardous road conditions, and hundreds of cancelled or delayed flights at Schiphol Airport. I woke up on the morning of January 4th to an email informing me that my flight had been delayed by an hour. Still, my parents insisted on taking me to the airport early, war
22 de mar.


A Second Reconstruction Harper Howze
My friends (and at least one professor) could all attest to the fact that I’m rather fascinated by the history of the American Civil War. Not the war itself, though. While the history is definitely striking, what I find most compelling are the years which followed its closure: they have the most to tell us about the disturbing times we now find ourselves in. Those years, from 1865 till 1877, are known as the Reconstruction Period. For more than a decade, the United States ex
22 de mar.


Why Peacocks Dress Better Than Men by Jill Ann Veerman
One thing that is synonymous with spring is sex. In Dutch, we have a word for the romantic juices that start to flow as spring emerges: lente kriebels , literally, “spring tickles”. It wouldn’t be a stretch to call them a biological instinct; the postcard-perfect baby lambs skipping around the meadow had to come from somewhere. But as the peacocks fan their feathers and the birds flash their luxurious plumage, I started to think: why, in the natural world, do the males dres
22 de mar.


Kill All Artists By Kevin Schirmann
Yesterday, I watched a piece of visual media, and it was utter beauty. Its deep and rich colour palettes stood out to me. Nauseous and psychedelic purples merged reminiscently into those green geometric patterns I see behind my eyes whenever I rub them too hard, dripping into a deep, saturated, and grainy red that gave it all this dream-like aesthetic - accompanied by these gorgeous Bossa Nova vibes and song. Of spotted ladybug, ephemeral smoke tiger next to waterfalls, the v
22 de mar.


Late to the Game: The Netherlands vs. Marty Supremeby Vanja Booth
Have you been dying to experience the Oscar-nominated film Marty Supreme (2025) on the big screen? Well, good news, it’s out now! After dodging spoilers and reading reviews in the 55 days between the U.S. release date on December 25, 2025, and February 18, 2026, you can finally put your frustrations to rest. The staggering delays for non-American A24 followers may feel like a disappointing pattern, but the reasons behind them are strategic and more financially involved than
22 de mar.


Green Head by Anomymous
I have a receding hairline, and I’m concerned about it. It’s 2:00 am, and I am staring at the mirror, holding back my hair with my fingers. As I crane my neck to get a better look at my temples, I can feel the cool, hard porcelain basin trying to hold me in place. The shelf below my mirror is crowded with a wide variety of solutions meant to stop my hairline from receding; there’s one with silver and potassium promising to stop miniaturisation, another contains Pyrodoxine, Th
22 de mar.


On (love) languages and the vow to complexity by Martina Malcotti
As the stereotypical Italian that I am, family is everything to me. I was raised by my parentsjust as much as by my grandparents, and every (mildly) relevant celebration is always worth a full-extended-family, midday-to-dusk, four-course meal. A significant part of my family, however, does not utter a single word of English. For the 17 years I spent living in the same provincial town of 3000 souls, this never seemed like much of a problem, but ever since moving to the kaleido
22 de mar.


A Reason to Write by Leonoor Post
The darkness of the night was a deep blue. Or perhaps it gently laid a blanket over my exhausted eyes. One might even say that the streetlights winked at me just like she once did. When my eyelids finally fluttered, it was like butterfly wings closing, with a touch just as soft. These and some more analogies come to mind, but falteringly. You must know that I am not a very skilled metaphorist – though I wish I were. That night, I had spent the time waiting for the bus wonderi
22 de mar.


Considering the Average – A Defence of the Everydays by Bence Bognár
I don’t travel solo. I don’t feel the intrinsic need to find myself through being in big, narratively significant situations; the adventurer’s spirit isn’t calling for me to move across the globe or even go on exchange. Is this cowardice, or sedentariness, each more boring and unseemly than the other? If you think so, I’d probably have a hard time convincing you otherwise. Yet to me, emotionally, this doesn’t appear to be the case. It’s not like I feel fearful or apathetic wh
22 de mar.


Blorange by Abigail Jervis
It was a stormy summer afternoon, the kind of day when the sweet sea air is scattered across the sky by the storm surge crashing into the sea walls. Heavy rains came battering their way down from the heavens just before the oppressive summer sun peeked its head up through the clouds, cranking up the humidity past the point where humans can no longer survive. On this day, I sought the refuge of my local cafe, Uncle Russ, to get some writing done. While established in the 1990s
22 de mar.
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