Today the RSB announces the launch of its new five-year strategy, from 2025-2030, and the unveiling of our new brand.
Growing the future is a report from the Royal Society of Biology Plant Science Group, published under its previous name, the UK Plant Sciences Federation. Launched in January 2019, the report ...
Infectious disease pandemics cause concern and captivate the imagination in equal measure. Public fear of the unknown and seemingly uncontrollable is fostered by news and social media and exploited by ...
This is the sequel to Isabella Tree’s excellent book Wilding: The Return to Nature of a British Farm, which was published in 2018 and has sold a quarter of a million copies in eight languages. It is ...
Paul Bloom’s latest offering is a measured and quietly authoritative tome that originated in the Introduction to Psychology course that the author taught for many years at Yale. Always calm and ...
This is a lavishly produced and beautifully illustrated coffee-table book firmly ensconced in the ‘public understanding of science’ genre. The author, Sandra Hempel, an esteemed medical journalist, ...
Participants created a biology-inspired art sculpture from recycled, or other, materials to enter into the RSB BioCraft competition. You can cast your vote to decide this year's winners. A to Z of the ...
The following books have been shortlisted for the Society of Biology Book Awards, celebrating outstanding biology books for the general reader, as well as exceptional undergraduate and postgraduate ...
Australia, New Zealand, Hong Kong and Mongolia are all in our sights this year as the Society expands its international presence outside Europe. A number of members from Australia and New Zealand have ...
People live together in large gatherings in cities, and some birds do too. Whether in our own cities alongside and around us, or in their own massive colonies, perhaps by the sea; roosting overnight ...
In being unable to reach a decision concerning the fate of Mary Queen of Scots, Queen Elizabeth I remarked that 'the hinder part' of her brain 'did not trust the forward sides of the same'. Whether ...