Dr Tomos Evans lays out the ways in which gender stereotypes continue to shape young women’s career prospects in Wales.
Mae the welsh agenda yn gylchgrawn Saesneg sydd yn cael ei hariannu gan Gyngor Llyfrau Cymru. Mae erthyglau’r cylchgrawn yn Saesneg ond mae’r tudalennau am waith y Sefydliad Materion Cymraeg ar gael yn ddwyieithog.
From Tanzania to the HMRC: Pru’s World
From being the daughter of a government minister in newly independent Tanzania to fighting customs fraud at HMRC and championing diversity in Wales, Pru Orridge tells her story.
An African Twist: Maggie’s Exotic Foods
Glenn Edwards uncovers the remarkable story of a small business given lift off when a Welsh community came together after a hate crime
‘Africa Welsh News is about connecting people’
Dylan Moore talks to Olu Oni and Glenn Edwards about Africa Welsh News, a community website that seeks to foster links across nations and continents
The Future of Journalism: Permanent Crisis, or Radical Solutions
What now for journalism in Wales after the closure of The National and rising costs? David Nicholson takes a look at the challenges facing the industry.
IWA Analysis: Mini-Budget: A Generational Missed Opportunity
Harry Thompson, the IWA’s Economic Policy Lead, responds to the UK Government’s mini-budget and subsequent events.
‘The miasma above Cardiff’: Notes on Wales’ Book of the Year
Dylan Moore says the judges’ – and people’s – choice of The Fortune Men makes for a vital reckoning with history – and with the present
What have we learned from the Rwandan Genocide?
Sophie Buchaillard connects the Ukrainian crisis and the Rwandan genocide to think about the West’s contrasting relationship to refugees.
We Really Need to Talk About Work
After four decades of neoliberalism, Jean Jenkins says it’s time for a meaningful debate about workplace dynamics and standards of work.