Illustration: Emma Peer

Agony Uncle

Ethical and political dilemmas abound these days. This month: Workplace culture.

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NI 544 - Palestine - July, 2023
Agony Uncle

Agony Uncle

Ethical and political dilemmas abound these days. This month: Insecure work vs safety.

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NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Illustration: Andy K using Shutterstock

Remote solidarity

Work from home policies aren’t going anywhere. So, with many workers in the UK feeling the strain of isolation, now is the time to ramp up trade union organizing, writes Eve Livingston.

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NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Illustration: Emma Peer

Agony Uncle

Ethical and political dilemmas abound these days. This month: Income vs ethics.

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NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Photo: Shelley Christians/Reuters/Alamy

Sign of the Times

Placard at Cape Town protest during nationwide strike over the cost of living in South Africa. R12,500 = $710

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NI 540 - Land rights - November, 2022
RMT activists on a picket line during a strike against driver-only operation on Southern, which operates commuter services to London. The RMT ultimately lost this dispute, but drove back similar moves from other train operating companies in Britain.Photo: Andrew Wiard

We’re going to be having punch-ups

Tom Haines-Doran explores the recent disputes between Britain’s train operating companies and rail union RMT over driver-only operation – and asks why railway workers are both willing to take strike action and successful in doing so.

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NI 539 - Railways - September, 2022
Cueca dancers celebrate the indigenous Aymara culture of the Andes – but in modern garb – as a carnaval parade gets under way in Arica, Chile.Photo: Jeffrey Isaac Greenberg 20+/Alamy

Living well

The obsession with full employment is a dead end in a world on the ecological brink. Richard Swift explores what could sustain us instead.

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NI 534 - The future of work - November, 2021
Read my facemask: a woman at a rally of essential workers in Detroit, Michigan, US, October 2020.Photo: Emily Elconin/Reuters/Alamy

The fight for lives and labour

Black women in the US do the socially important work, often unnamed and unrecognized, that is essential to the profit of an economic elite. Rose M Brewer profiles four examples of how they are standing up for change.

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NI 534 - The future of work - November, 2021
Catching up with the Trolley Times, Ghaziabad, India, April 2021. The four-page weekly newspaper, printed in Gurmukhi and Hindi, was founded in December 2020 to give voice to the farmers’ protest.Photo: SOPA Images Limited/Alamy

Holding out for the harvest

The stratagems of big corporate players and a compliant government will make the job of growing food not worth doing for Indian smallholders. Farming is not just an occupation but a way of life – and the fightback is robust. Navsharan Singh outlines just what is at stake.

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NI 534 - The future of work - November, 2021
Launched in May 2020, the worker-members of ChiFresh Kitchen have been busy throughout the Covid-19 pandemic cooking up healthy, culturally appropriate food for their Chicago community. As well as providing emergency food aid, the co-op – which employs formerly incarcerated people – is also contracted to provide food for schools and social centres and makes several hundred meals a day.Photo: Kai Brown

The democratic workplace

Can employees be in full control of their enterprises? Amy Hall explores the possibilities and tensions of worker co-operatives.

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NI 534 - The future of work - November, 2021
No fear of heights: two engineers check out the drill shaft on an oil platform in the North Sea.Photo: Horizon International Images Limited/Alamy

Green jobs - puffery and promise

Campaigners have long argued that a transition to renewable energy could provide a jobs bonanza. Now politicians are talking that talk – but many workers in the fossil-fuel industry believe it’s a con. Conrad Landin picks through the rhetoric with offshore workers in Scotland.

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NI 534 - The future of work - November, 2021
 Economic migrants from rural areas at work on a construction site in Nairobi, Kenya. Such jobs are usually temporary, sometimes just a day’s labour.Photo: Nature Picture/Alamy

The squeeze on workers

Starting from the revelations of a global pandemic, Dinyar Godrej looks into the possible futures of work.

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NI 534 - The future of work - November, 2021
Photo: World bank photo collection

Can workers reset the system?

Coronavirus has closed factories and workshops across the world, spelling disaster for millions of people who subsist on poverty wages. Tansy Hoskins reimagines a garment industry where workers are better protected.

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NI 527 - Covid-19 lessons from the pandemic - September, 2020
Agony Uncle

Agony Uncle

Ethical and political dilemmas abound these days. Seems like we’re all in need of a New Internationalist perspective. Enter stage: Agony Uncle.

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NI 525 - The fight for clean air - May, 2020
Illustration: Andy Carter

What if… we worked less?

Aidan Harper makes the case for a new politics of time.

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NI 520 - The right to the city - July, 2019

Maria Soccorro dela Cruz (pictured with her grandson), was sexually and verbally abused while a domestic worker in Lebanon and Syria to support her family in Manila.Photo: Robin Hammond / Panos

Sponsored abuse

A lack of legal protection combined with toxic prejudice leaves migrant workers in Lebanon between a rock and a hard place. But the struggle for rights is under way and, as Fiona Broom reports, it’s coming from the ground up.

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NI 507 - Humans vs robots - November, 2017
Illustration by Sarah John

Letter from Cochabamba

Working children have more pressing concerns than the law, discovers Amy Booth.

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NI 499 - African village - January, 2017
The downside to electric cars

The downside to electric cars

They may be good for the environment, but not for those mining the cobalt needed to manufacture their batteries, writes Neil Thompson.

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NI 499 - African village - January, 2017
Bitter grapes sweeten in South Africa

Bitter grapes sweeten in South Africa

Peter Kenworthy on a striking success for wine workers.

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NI 499 - African village - January, 2017
Picking up the pieces: a garment worker sorts material in a building near the site of the Rana Plaza collapse.Photo: G.M.B. Akash/Panos Pictures

Out of the ashes of Rana Plaza

The factory collapse in 2013 caused an international outcry – but have labour conditions improved? Thulsi Narayanasamy reports from Bangladesh.

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NI 495 - Trade unions - rebuild, renew, resist - September, 2016

Articles in this category displayed as a table:

Article title From magazine Publication date
Palestine July, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
A world to win March, 2023
Land rights November, 2022
Railways September, 2022
The future of work November, 2021
The future of work November, 2021
The future of work November, 2021
The future of work November, 2021
The future of work November, 2021
The future of work November, 2021
Covid-19 lessons from the pandemic September, 2020
The fight for clean air May, 2020
The right to the city July, 2019
Humans vs robots November, 2017
African village January, 2017
African village January, 2017
African village January, 2017
Trade unions - rebuild, renew, resist September, 2016
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