Deluge, an art installation by sculptor Toin Adams, 
at the Custard Factory, Birmingham.Photo: John James/Alamy

Stilling the pendulum

The ghost of Dinyar Godrej looks back from 2073 to see how personal revolutions built a society that is truly social.

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NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Heading out to sea in Mahébourg, Mauritius.Photo: Tommy Trenchard/Panos Pictures

Treasure hunt

Could a Kenyan court case point the way towards a more just tax system? Amy Hall investigates.

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NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Photo: Mycallohgee/Mushroom Observer/Creative Commons

Extractive delusions

Fungi have been touted as an alternative to plastics – but it’s dangerous to see them solely as a product, argues Emma McKeever.

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NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Illustration: Andy K using images from Shutterstock

Hope from the seed of trauma

The pandemic years were the pivot for a rapid shift bringing a better new world into being. Andrew Simms travels through time.

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NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
A study of 10,000 young people across 10 countries found 45 per cent said climate change ‘negatively affected their daily life and functioning’. The impact was significantly higher in the four Global South countries surveyed: Brazil, Nigeria, the Philippines and India.Photo: Media Lens King/shutterstock

A world to win

We don’t just need solutions – we need the courage to imagine they will succeed. Conrad Landin makes the case for collective action to secure a just future.

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NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Thomas Kwoyelo is escorted by Ugandan army officers upon arrival at Entebbe air force base on 4 March 2009.Photo: James Akena/Reuters/Alamy

The long wait of Thomas Kwoyelo

A former child soldier in the ferocious Lord’s Resistance Army has been on trial for war crimes in Uganda for 13 years. Meanwhile thousands of other fighters have been welcomed home under amnesty legislation. Sophie Neiman visits Gulu to find out how this contentious case is failing the LRA’s victims.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Former dictators Hugo Banzer Suarez of Bolivia and Augusto Pinochet of Chile raise a salute on 8 February in the border town of Charaña. In 1971 Suarez came to power via a coup that overthrew president Juan José Torres who was later killed as part of Operation Condor.Photo: Reuters/Lucio Flores

The usual suspects

Those seeking justice for the survivors and victims of Bolivia’s dictatorships are still being stonewalled. Thomas Graham reports.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023

16 million and counting - the collateral damage of capital

Over the past 50 years, powerful states and corporations have imposed neoliberal policies around the world, delivering a potent cocktail of privatization, deregulation and cuts to public services. Millions have died from inadequate access to basic nutrition. There is another way, write Dylan Sullivan and Jason Hickel.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Fifteen-year-old Wakeel, displaced by the floods in Pakistan, prepares a makeshift shelter at a camp in Sehwan, 30 September 2022.Photo: Akhtar Soomro/REUTERS/Alamy

Pushing against the perfect storm

Climate disasters and fossil fuel dependency are ramping up the cost of living crisis. Marianne Brooker looks at the solutions that are there for the making.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Activists from the Platform for People Affected by Mortgages (PAH) hold up signs – ‘500,000 foreclosures’, ‘Organized Citizens’ – at a protest in Barcelona, May 2014.Photo: Matthias Oesterle/Alamy

Debtors unite

Spain’s human shields against evictions, by Luke Stobart.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
A farmer stands by signs, with photos of Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and others pasted onto the bodies of a variety of creatures, during protests in January 2021.Photo: Im_Rohitbhakar/Shutterstock

The farmers rise

The mass protests of 2020-21 in India showed the world what solidarity in action can look like.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
On borrowed rice

On borrowed rice

Price hikes are leaving many in Sierra Leone unable to even afford food. Alessio Perrone reports.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Illustration: Simon Kneebone

Wealth safari

Boom time for billionaires and the super-rich, by Vanessa Baird.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Women sift stones for building material at the abandoned slagheap of the Chinese-owned Luanshya Copper Mine, in Kitwe, Zambia.Photo: Joerg Boethling/Alamy

Structural adjustment 2.0

As the International Monetary Fund keeps pushing austerity, Zambian journalist Zanji Valerie Sinkala explores whether that’s really a solution to her country’s economic woes.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
A woman shouts slogan against the Bolivian government during a demonstration against increases to water rates in Cochabamba, April 2000.Photo: David Mercado/Reuters

De-privatizing the rain

How Bolivians beat a corporate water grab.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Cost of living - The Facts

Cost of living - The Facts

Inflation, poverty and hunger, debt, profit and inequality.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Action & info

Action & info

Initiatives, action, and further reading on the cost of living.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Protestors in Panama City in July 2022 demand the government puts a ceiling on the price of fuel, food and medicines.Photo: Erick Marciscano/Reuters/Alamy

Whodunnit?

As the cost of living crisis becomes entrenched, Nick Dowson examines the scene of the crime, tracks down the culprits and proposes a route to resolution.

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NI 541 - The cost of living crisis - January, 2023
Top left: Forty years after the original Greenham Women’s Peace Camp was established, activists marched to the site ahead of the anniversary celebrations in September 2021. Commemorations also took place at Faslane this year, where a peace camp was established in 1982 and has continued to this day. Top right: the sign marking the entrance to the camp; Bottom right: an activist uses a stencil to mark slogans on a nearby road; Bottom left: activists participate in a ‘die-in’.Photos: Top left Maggie Sully/Alamy, all others Denise Laura Baker

Hear us roar

It’s 40 years since the establishment of peace camps at the British atomic weapons bases of Greenham Common and Faslane. Speaking to the women at the centre of four decades of resistance, Denise Laura Baker asks what keeps them going.

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NI 540 - Land rights - November, 2022

Articles in this category displayed as a table:

Article title From magazine Publication date
A world to win March, 2023
A world to win March, 2023
A world to win March, 2023
A world to win March, 2023
A world to win March, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
Land rights November, 2022
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