-
Study
-
Quick Links
- Open Days & Events
- Fixed Block Degrees
- Real-World Learning
- Unlock Your Potential
- Tuition Fees, Funding & Scholarships
- Still Time to Apply
-
Undergraduate
- Application Guides
- UCAS Exhibitions
- Extended Degrees
- School & College Outreach
- Parents & Guardians
-
Postgraduate
- Application Guide
- Postgraduate Research Degrees
- Flexible Learning
- Change Direction
- Register your Interest
-
Student Life
- Students' Union
- The Hub - Student Blog
- Accommodation
- Northumbria Sport
- Support for Students
-
Learning Experience
- Real-World Learning
- Research-enriched learning
- Graduate Futures
- The Business Clinic
- Study Abroad
-
-
International
International
Ideally situated in the 5th best student city in the UK (QS Best Student Cities 2026), Northumbria University is a UK Top 40 University (Complete University Guide 2026) with a diverse community of 34,500 students from over 140 countries.
View our Global Footprint-
International Students
- Information for International Students
- Northumbria and your Country
- International Student Events
- Application Guide
- Entry Requirements and Education Country Agents
- Global Offices and Regional Teams
- English Requirements
- English Language Centre
- International student support
- Cost of Living
-
International Fees and Funding
- International Undergraduate Fees
- International Undergraduate Funding
- International Masters Fees
- International Masters Funding
- International Postgraduate Research Fees
- International Postgraduate Research Funding
- Useful Financial Information
-
International Partners
- Agent and Representatives Network
- Global Partnerships
- Global Community
-
International Mobility
- Study Abroad
- Information for Incoming Exchange Students
-
-
Business
Business
Northumbria University is proud to offer a range of Professional, Statutory and Regulatory Body (PSRB) approved & accredited courses and programmes. Explore our list of courses and programmes under our Education and Training page.
More on our Business Services-
Business Quick Links
- Contact Us
- Business Events
- Research and Consultancy
- Education and Training
- Workforce Development Courses
- Join our mailing list
-
-
Research
Research
Northumbria is a research-rich, business-focused, professional university with a global reputation for academic quality. We conduct ground-breaking research that is responsive to the science & technology, health & well being, economic and social and arts & cultural needs for the communities
Discover more about our Research-
Quick Links
- Research Peaks of Excellence
- Academic Departments
- Research Staff
- Postgraduate Research Studentships
- Research Events
-
Research at Northumbria
- Interdisciplinary Research Themes
- Research Impact
- REF
- Partners and Collaborators
-
Support for Researchers
- Research and Innovation Services Staff
- Researcher Development and Training
- Ethics, Integrity, and Trusted Research
- University Library
- Vice Chancellors Fellows
-
Research Degrees
- Postgraduate Research Overview
- Doctoral Training Partnerships and Centres
- Academic Departments
-
Research Culture
- Research Culture
- Research Culture Action Plan
- Concordats and Commitments
-
-
About Us
-
About Northumbria
- Our Strategy
- Our Staff
- Our Schools
- Place and Partnerships
- Leadership & Governance
- University Services
- Northumbria History
- Contact us
- Online Shop
-
-
Alumni
Alumni
Northumbria University is renowned for the calibre of its business-ready graduates. Our alumni network has over 253,000 graduates based in 178 countries worldwide in a range of sectors, our alumni are making a real impact on the world.
Our Alumni - Work For Us
EXPERT COMMENT – Have hopes of coexistence ended as Belgium’s first wolf in 100 years is presumed dead
Mike Jeffries, Associate Professor in Ecology at Northumbria University, discusses whether hopes of coexistence have ended as Belgium’s first wolf in 100 years is presumed dead.
When Naya arrived in Belgium in January 2018, she was the first wolf to be tracked in the country for at least 100 years. She’d been followed with a radio collar since she was a cub, so scientists knew when she left her family pack in eastern Germany to start a new life across the border. They also knew when she met another interloper, the male wolf, August, in August 2018.
Their cubs were the first Belgian-born wolves in over a century. A handful of fleeting wolf sightings in Belgium and the Netherlands in recent years led many to believe that the species is back for good in northeast Europe, reoccupying the territories they vacated after centuries of hunting. Instead, Naya is now almost certainly dead.
Naya was a bit special. Wolves will often strike out for new territory, but Naya’s was an adventurous trek west, captured by radio and camera traps. Her journey seemed the culmination of the gray wolf’s recolonisation of western Europe from old strongholds in Poland and Romania.
The wolf’s return to old European haunts is matched by the comeback of brown bear, Eurasian lynx and wolverine in other parts of central and western Europe. These species are increasingly at home outside of nature reserves, sharing the land with humans. Wolves are expanding their range in North America too, increasingly into urban areas.
But the last photos of Naya, taken by the Belgium government’s Nature and Forest Research Institute, were in May 2019. Her mate, August, has reverted to lone wolf behaviours and is no longer caching food for cubs. Government and conservation groups agree that Naya and her cubs are dead. A €30,000 reward for information has been raised, petitions launched seeking justice against Naya’s “murderer” and a furious war of words has ignited between conservationists and hunters, who have been fingered as Naya’s killers.
From such high hopes only a year before, does Naya’s death endanger the idea of modern societies living alongside large predators like wolves?
Who’s afraid of the big bad wolf?
There is a grim inevitability to Naya’s fate. Wolves, above all predators, seem to provoke intense reactions. We either revere them as an incarnation of essential wildness, spawning hundreds of t-shirt designs – usually with added moon and a bit of howling – or they prove an irresistible target for hunters. In the latter category, wolves are an intruder, an existential affront that must be wiped out, regardless of wider public tolerance or legal protection.
The survival of large carnivores sharing our landscapes depends as much on public mood and knowledge as it does practical conservation. A recent study set out to untangle different influences on people’s attitudes to wolves in Germany, where the species returned in 2000. The researchers wanted to know which information sources had the greatest impact in forming opinions about these new neighbours.
The study compared the responses from people living in an area with wolves to those from people living further afield. In the region with wolves, people held more neutral views compared with the positive responses elsewhere. People who lived alongside wolves had more knowledge about them, but were also less positive about the species if they got their information from the press or TV news. Unfortunately, that’s where most people heard about the wolves.
If people got more of their information from books or films, they were more likely to have positive attitudes about wolves. Clearly, wolves like Naya need better agents – more film roles or sympathetic novels could swing public opinion in their favour.
There are only a few wolf celebrities to counter the blood-stained cliché, notably the Jungle Book’s wolf pack, a loving family, who adopt and protect Mowgli. There is also the she-wolf who suckled Romulus and Remus, the brothers who founded Rome, although Romulus later murdered his brother, so maybe his upbringing left something to be desired.
The benefits and drawbacks of wolves are widely known, or, quite often, widely assumed. Wolves can attack people and livestock, but they also create jobs and generate tourism. They can also reinvigorate landscapes by hunting the herbivores that stop trees and forests from growing. As with most things when it comes to wolves, both the positives and negatives seem to be exaggerated.
The main challenge remains that wolves have a terrible branding problem; wherever wolves and people have lived side by side, their place in our folklore and faiths is malevolent and unusually rapacious. As Naya’s death shows, they may be irretrievably typecast.
This article was originally published by The Conversation, click here to see the original article.
This is the place to find all the latest news releases, feature articles, expert comment, and video and audio clips from Northumbria University
This is the place to find all the latest news releases, feature articles, expert comment, and video and audio clips from Northumbria University
Latest News and Features
Landmark North East commitment to women and girls in sport
Northumbria University has joined professional sports clubs, foundations and fellow universities…
Northumbria Law students gain inside view into international courts during Hague study visit
Students from Northumbria Law School have returned from a four-day study visit to The Hague,…
From Sydney Opera House to Northern Stage: powerful Indigenous dance production finally arrives in the North East
A critically acclaimed dance production exploring the trauma of Australia's Stolen Generations…
404 International Festival of Art and Technology lands in Newcastle this summer
The world-renowned art and technology festival is set to take place in the UK for the first…
Northumbria nursing lecturer named Nurse Educator of the Year at prestigious national awards
A Northumbria University academic has been named Nurse Educator of the Year at the British…
Rethinking trust and democracy in international governance
Northumbria University is spearheading a major international research initiative that explores…
What Are Words Worth 2U2?
Programme Northumbria is delighted to present What Are Words Worth 2U2?, an interdisciplinary,…
Celebrate the next generation of creative talent at Northumbria graduate showcase
Northumbria University’s annual REVEAL degree shows spotlight the exceptional work of graduating…
Upcoming events
REVEAL Music Recitals 2026
The Great Hall
-
Northumbria and SGU Alumni Celebration
Versa Rooftop - New York
-
Alumni Social New York
Peter Dillons
-
Alumni Social Boston
The Banshee Pub
-
