
Shout Out UK
The home of political literacy and youth voice
Featured Writers

Holly Hostettler-Davies
Feminist writer and journalist specialising in women's rights, women's health and gender equality.
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Robert Mooney
Award-winning experienced Contributor with a demonstrated history of working in the media production industry. Skilled in Photography, Copywriting, Storytelling, Final Cut Pro, and News Writing, developed from writing for a …
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Tara Russell
I am a curious and empathetic freelance journalist, specialising in culture, lifestyle and opinion pieces. I am currently based in Galicia, Spain, working for The British Council whilst I continue …
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Liam Price
I'm Liam Price. I'm 26. I'm from Crewe in Cheshire. I have a BA(Hons) in Multimedia Journalism from Salford University, which was based at the world class facilities of Media …
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Legally Owned By a Man: #FreeBritney Echoes the Plight of 'Hysterical Women' - Shout Out UK
THE STORY OF BRITNEY CONCERNS COUNTLESS OTHER WOMENBritney Spears can’t leave the house without permission or live where she wants to. She can’t spend her own money or make crucial decisions about her body — such as whether or not to have more children. For the last decade, every one …

Toxic 'Hostile Environment' policy for UK migrants is jeopardising public health - Shout Out UK
Within the last year, this government has willfully ignored the plight of undocumented immigrants and refugees, denying them safe accommodation and safe access to healthcare.The government’s policy of creating a ‘hostile environment’ has become increasingly harmful throughout this pandemic. The term ‘hostile environment’ refers to a set of policies created …

Class Bias at UK Universities: 'You Speak Remarkably Well for a State-Educated Person'
It was a casual conversation, at a house party during my final year of university, when after being asked what school I attended, someone turned to me and said, ‘You speak remarkably well for a state-educated person.’ The comment was delivered with an air of innocent surprise, but beneath it …

Homelessness Charities Should Not Exist: Why Does the State Act Like They Should?
Homelessness rates have reached record levels and nowhere is this more obvious than in the capital. It was during my first few months of university when I discovered that a man who I passed every day on my way to campus, had sadly died the night before. The only record …

The Adaptive Fashion Revolution is Coming
When Victoria Jenkins presented her adaptive fashion brand, Unhidden, on Dragon’s Den it was rejected for investment. On Tuesday, she got the last laugh as her designs for Primark’s new 49-piece adaptive collection went live across the UK. Roughly 1 in 4 (24 per cent) of the UK’s population has …

Every 10 Minutes … A Woman is Killed: #NoExcuse
Last year, across the world, a woman was killed every ten minutes by an intimate partner or family member. In the UK, one woman is killed every three days. Femicide is the gender-related intentional killing of women. It is the most brutal, extreme and horrifying manifestation of gender-based violence. Globally, …

What the Paralympics Can Teach Us About Inclusion and Excellence
IPC President Andrew Parsons’ 2024 Paralympic opening speech struck a chord when headlines just before the games highlighted the struggles of disabled people battling the transport system. First and foremost, the Paralympics is and should be about elite sport. But given the world’s focus on disability, the games can provide …

Are rural English pubs a thing of antiquity?
Rural English pubs are on a life support machine, and the visitors have long stopped coming by.

Why You Should Know More About Disability Rights History, and I Should Too
From November 16 until December 16 it’s UK Disability History Month. Thinking of this has made me aware of how little I know of the struggle for disability rights or any other detail of disability history. This shouldn’t be surprising, however, as a recent survey for ITV News found that …

Why the Mechanisms of Politics Should be More Accessible to Disabled People
‘What message does it send to future Disabled leaders!?’ is a question Sophie Morgan, TV presenter and #rightsonflights campaigner, posed on Instagram where upon arrival, she found 10 Downing Street was inaccessible to wheelchair users. How can we tackle issues (that often hit people with disabilities the hardest) if political …

Ending the Period Taboo: An Interview with Laura Coryton MBE
Laura Coryton took down the tampon tax. Now she’s trying to revolutionise sex education and empower young girls to stand up, speak up and engage with politics. Until 2021, Chanel handbags and tampons had one thing in common: the UK Government classed them as luxury, taxable items. This is still …

Musk Has a Better Chance of Reaching Mars than Reforming Twitter
It’s official; Elon Musk has bought Twitter. The $44 billion takeover deal agreed on Monday, comes just two weeks after the world’s richest man rejected the offer of a board seat and submitted his own bid for the social media giant. What’s the Deal with the Twitter Deal? The speed …

What Northern Ireland’s Abortion Story Can Teach America
What can America learn from Northern Ireland about abortion restrictions?

Why is Britain’s Political Youth Fleeing to the Far-Left?
A short investigation as to why Britain's youth seem to flee to the far left.

Should We Cast Actors that 'Live' their Roles in Real Life?
Should We Cast Actors that 'Live' their Roles in Real Life?

Is it Time to Delete Facebook?
It sounded like the start of a glorious future. ‘We have a new North Star’ proclaimed Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg, as he introduced Facebook’s ambitious new vision of a virtual-reality based ‘Metaverse’ and unveiled a new company name, ‘Meta’. Yet even as Zuckerberg was announcing the rebrand, Facebook was telling …

Cartooning in South Africa: Jonathan Zapiro on the Post-Apartheid 'Rainbow Nation'
Jonathan Shapiro, also known as Zapiro, is a renowned South African cartoonist. His cartoons have appeared in numerous publications in South Africa, as well as in The Sunday Times. Shout Out UK has been working with Cartooning for Peace and the University of Leicester to run COVID in Cartoons, a …

Willis from Tunis: An Interview with Cartoonist Nadia Khiari
Cartooning is a subject that has caused much division and controversy in recent years. Cartoonists have paid with their lives for drawing the Prophet Muhammed. And last year, here in the UK, there was a row about a cartoon in The Guardian that depicted the Home Secretary, Priti Patel, as …

Hilary Mantel Is Wrong About 'Englishness'
‘Englishness’ is an elusive idea. Could a ‘civic’ version of Englishness be the answer? Those were the words of the Irish playwright, George Bernard Shaw. I was reminded of this quote last week when the renowned British author Hilary Mantel gave an interview to Italy’s la Repubblica. She said that …

Forget the North/South Divide: Poverty in the South of England is Being Ignored
The ‘Blue Wall’ analogy refers to prosperous, Remain-leaning seats, mainly in the South of England. Since the Tories embraced Brexit and are now focused on holding onto the gains made in the Red Wall, with their ‘levelling up’ agenda, it is thought that they could be at risk of losing …

How Many Genocides Does it Take? In Conversation with Holocaust Survivor, Eva Clarke
Eva Clarke weighed only three pounds when she was born in Mauthausen Concentration Camp on April 29, 1945. Had her mother, Anka, arrived at Mauthausen just a few days earlier, neither she nor Eva would have lived. But by the time she arrived, the Nazis had run out of gas, …

The Mental Health Crisis is Becoming a Casualty of the Culture Wars
There was something inevitable about Piers Morgan’s response to Simone Biles’ decision to withdraw (temporarily) from the 2020 Olympics on mental health grounds. Biles’ ‘greatest move’ is her ability to put herself first Biles later rejoined the competition and went on to win a bronze medal. But before this, writing …

What Does the Future Hold for Brexit Britain? A Conversation with Robert Tombs
A discussion with Professor Robert Tombs on persecuted Leave academics and Britain’s precarious new future. Whether you’ve voted to leave or remain, I think most British voters hoped that when Boris Johnson promised to ‘get Brexit done’ at the 2019 election, it would get done. Sadly, it was not to …

Are Schools Becoming More Eco-Friendly? A Conversation with Harvey Sinclair
Harvey Sinclair is an entrepreneur who co-founded E-Light, a company that aims to simplify energy efficiency and maximise the use of LED lighting (light-emitting diode). LED lighting is more eco-friendly for a range of reasons; they last longer, so you needn’t buy them as frequently, they are brighter, which means …

Love Islander's Misogynistic Comment Sparks Discourse on Women's Body Hair
British dating reality series, Love Island, is known for controversy. However, viewers were left angered by the show after contestant, Aaron Francis, revealed that ‘hairy arms’ are his biggest turnoff. The misogynistic comment sparked discourse concerning attitudes towards women’s body hair. But the topic is hardly new. For years, women …

Beware Those Trying to Exploit the BBC’s Woes
HAS BBC’S MARTIN BASHIR HAMMERED THE FINAL NAIL IN THE COFFIN? One view truly unites people across the UK’s political spectrum: the BBC is outrageously biased (although they seem to be biased in favour of different political positions, depending on who is making the accusation). Brexiteers have alleged that the …

A Year After it Became Notorious, Boogaloo is Still Spreading on TikTok
At first glance, the videos don’t seem that different from anything else users might find on TikTok. There are a lot of memes, lip-syncing, and badly synchronised dancing. But the dancers are in combat gear, the lip-syncs are accompanied by M-16s, and the memes are about killing ‘alphabet bois’, slang …

Government Cuts to Arts Funding Undermine Promise To 'Level Up' the Country
THIS GOVERNMENT OF PHILISTINES MAY NOT CARE ABOUT CULTURE, BUT SURELY THEY CARE ABOUT MONEY? A few months ago, the Conservative MP for Rosendale and Darwen, Jake Berry, was ridiculed for saying that in the North of England, football, rather than the ‘Royal Ballet or Royal Opera House or Royal …

Why we Love Line of Duty but not The Crown
A few weeks ago at PMQs, Keir Starmer joked that the government needed a Ted Hastings to sort out corruption. Ted Hastings (Adrian Dunbar), is one of the central characters in the BBC police procedural Line of Duty. The show centres around an anti-corruption unit (AC-12) aimed at catching ‘bent …