This themed issue of the Magazine of Concrete Research includes eight papers that have been chosen to reflect the diversity of current research into structural concrete. None of the papers were specially commissioned for the issue. A striking feature of all the papers is that they involve experimental work, as well as analytical modelling, which illustrates the continuing importance of structural testing in concrete research. (2010) have previously raised the concern that statically indeterminate members can fail in shear after the formation of the first plastic hinge prior to reaching their design load. Considerations like these suggest that tests on statically determinate beams may not be a good indicator of the performance of continuous beams where significant moment redistribution can occur following the development of the first plastic hinge. Therefore, there appears to be a need for further tests to study the effect of yielding of flexural reinforcement on the shear resistance of continuous beams.The paper by Yang et al. (2012) is also concerned with the shear transfer but this time with shear transfer through monolithic concrete joints. In this case, concrete is modelled as a rigidperfectly plastic material that reflects the diversity of modelling approaches for structural concrete. The paper by Motamed et al. (2012) considers the influence of horizontal web reinforcement on shear resistance. The article focuses on the contribution of dowel action which is not widely considered in shear design.The paper by Lu et al. (2012) considers the behaviour of reinforced concrete dapped-end beams for which a softened strutand-tie model is shown to give reasonable predictions of shear strength. In this context, it is interesting to note that neither Eurocode 2 nor the draft Model Code 2010 relate the concrete compressive strength in struts to their orientation or the strain in the ties as suggested by Collins et al. (2008). This would seem to be a significant omission since there is considerable evidence that the compressive strength of struts in short span beams depends upon the ratio of the shear span to the effective depth. For this reason, the background document (BSI, 2010) to the UK National Annex to Eurocode 2 limits the use of the strut-and-tie method to cases where the ratio of the shear span to the effective depth is less than 1 . 5.The remaining paper on shear concerns the behaviour of nonseismically detailed beam-column joints under cyclic loading (Joyklad et al., 2012). This is an important issue as many reinforced concrete framed structures in seismic regions have not been designed to modern seismic codes. The article by Park et al. (2012) is also concerned with the seismic design of reinforced concrete. It considers the modelling of confined concrete under combined axial load and bending.The paper by Choi et al. (2012) considers the flexural performance of reinforced concrete beams with recycled aggregate. Significantly, the performance of the beams with recycled aggregates is shown to be comparable ...