News

Sheffield Palestine Campaign Against Israeli Apartheid. In November 2023, Sheffield made national headlines as the first city council in the UK to vote to call for a ceasefire in Gaza. Others soon ...
Traditional forms of journalism have let communities across our city down. That's why over the next few years we're looking at ways to use our platform and our skills to help build real community ...
Cloaked in the scent of oil and eclipsed by the shadow of another Trump presidency, negotiations at COP29 in Azerbaijan are in their final week. The global climate talks may seem distant, but might it ...
Crip is bold, rebellious and unapologetic. Crip has sass and attitude. Crip is a movement that has emerged from the disability community actively rebelling against ableist attitudes, prejudice and ...
Now Then speaks to Natalie Shaw, Strategic Lead for Violence Against Women and Girls about the justice gap experienced by disabled women reporting rape in South Yorkshire.
Throughout these processes, the city has been the site of a class struggle in which working people have time and again attempted to improve our pay, reduce our hours of work and establish more control ...
New data seen exclusively by Now Then shows that the University of Sheffield (UoS) received even more money from companies that manufacture deadly weapons than had previously been thought, with ...
Despite its name, the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds doesn't actually protect birds thanks to its underlying philosophy – one that is doomed to fail.
Activists from Extinction Rebellion worked with students from People & Planet as part of the action. People & Planet. Student activists at the University of Sheffield (UoS) have protested throughout ...
SYPA manages pensions on behalf of Sheffield City Council. Rachel Rae Photography The Palestinian flag will be raised above Sheffield Town Hall tomorrow, marking the city’s participation in the UN-led ...
An all-white panel was initially chosen to decide the future of one of the university’s leading departments, despite 95% of its language staff being of East Asian heritage.
Four people who live and work alongside the Don explore their relationship to the river and how it could be better cared for, as well as the positive and negative impacts it has on their lives.