Study

  • Our Universities are population hubs for excellence

    Our Universities are hubs of excellence for members of the population that know how to do something. They’re training grounds for our next batch of Civil Servants at any single time. They’re also places where our next great minds are honing their skills.

    Locations of some of our top Universities according to publicly-available indices in the UK.

    It’s important to touch base with your country in order to show what you can do – and even be shown the way to do it in future. This is even more vital as other States become competitive in the way they try to undermine us.

    It’s important to keep talent at home, to make it profitable for all, and to derive some public benefit that lives on. It makes us prosperous, it makes us whole, it even makes us better than other people. It’s to our credit, and our acclaim.

  • A University is not a way of life

    The standard model of planning involves looking at all possible aspects of a particular plan. The putting in of a University incudes many of the considerations you’d think are necessary.

    It also involves many aspects of modern planning that are new to most people. These orientate on movement of people, logistics of daily life, and the resourcing of materials. It’s a tough business.

    The functions of an academic institution are elite in many respects. Irrespective of the aptitude level of its intake in general, a University is still regarded as being at the top of its game.

    This requires professional thinking even in the way a University is run and managed day to day. The type of expertise means that many academics are not suited to doing it by themselves.

  • Living the law of the land

    The UK is a boiling pot of neighbourhoods, and communities, but it produces a few off tastes now and then. It’s not the dodgy courts, traders, or dealers that are the main issue here. The point is the pitfalls of integration, degenerating gentrification, and simple neglect, among common forms of abuse.

    The study of the law is considered advanced beyond others, but the practice of it is less refined. It’s a gritty, bare, and naked arrangement with the vagaries of all classes, types, and realms in society. It doesn’t look appealing to those looking on. It’s also unseemly at times if the crimes are particularly gruesome.

    The UK has five law schools in the world top 20 rankings. The two top spots are reserved for Cambridge and Oxford (3 and 7), but the others are nested in there, too. Sadly, Wales doesn’t feature at all, but England and Scotland each have spots. Over 129,000 study it, according to Times Higher Education.

    The daily press are happy to type away about our decline, but the pursuit of happiness here is predicated on the law. It’s heartening that London is seeing development in this area. A new Supreme Court opened its doors in 2009, and right now, a City of London Law Courts is being built on a site in Fleet Street.

    The potential for more justice, and therefore peace, is apparent across all of the UK. It’s shown in the take-up of courses, the expansion of the news room concept, and the development of legal facilities across our communities. The fight is to make sure cases get to court, and our disputes are heard.