Nicola Sturgeon has been a central figure in Scottish politics since devolution in 1999. As First Minister since 2014, she has offered an image of stability in contrast to Westminster chaos. Here she is pictured on the campaign trail during the 2015 UK general election, in which the SNP wiped out Scottish Labour and won all but three seats north of the border.Photo: Andrew Wilson/Alamy

Tough love

As Scotland bids farewell to first minister Nicola Sturgeon, Conrad Landin looks at the state of the democracy she leaves behind.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
The Colour of Madness

The Colour of Madness

Husna Ara speaks to Dr Samara Linton about The Colour of Madness, her co-edited anthology that brings to life the varied experiences of alienation for migrants and people of colour in the UK.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Full speed ahead: Khawaja sira people celebrate the passing of the Transgender Persons (Protection of Rights) Act in Lahore on 29 December 2018. The bill allows people to declare their gender – male, female or third gender (non-binary) – without expensive and painstaking medical transition.Photo: KM Chaudary/AP Photo/Alamy

Chosen family

Tooba Syed on how Pakistan’s gender non-conforming community are fighting renewed attacks on their age old existence and customs – through queer kinship.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Illustration: Cassette Bleue/Shutterstock

A 101 in lovelessness

Success coaches, pick-up artists, men’s rights activists. Popular influencers are preying on men and boys’ emotional isolation. Daisy Schofield reports on how we might intervene.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Throwback cinema: Mumbai movie-goers embrace an open-air film screening on 5 November 2021, following Covid-19 restrictions over indoor gatherings.Photo: Francis Mascarenhas/Reuters/Alamy

Keeping up with the Khans

From rank and file unionist heroes to industrialist lone wolves, Bollywood storytellers and ‘content creators’ have shifted to write out India’s collective spirit. Ishika Saxena questions what this means for how the country’s citizens can be brought together.

Buy this magazine

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.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Action & info

Action & info

Initiatives, action, and further reading on loneliness.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
Rush hour – Workers scurry speedily to their next destination. Since the 1970s, Singapore and Guangzhou, China have seen the highest increase in pedestrian walking speeds. Calls for effiency in mobility can often come back to bite us with reduced social empathy and ableist attitudes.Photo: Estherpoon/Shutterstock

The connection recession

Loneliness and social isolation have become chronic issues across the world. We must resist attempts to close down meaningful human interaction, writes Husna Ara.

Buy this magazine

NI 543 - Loneliness - May, 2023
The tagline of Iran’s recent pro-women’s movement is translated from a Kurdish slogan which neatly captures the ideology of the region’s feminist politics. Here a mural displays the Kurdish original.Photo: Herzi Pinki/Creative Commons

The science of women

Around the world, people are chanting ‘Women, Life, Freedom’ in solidarity with the women’s uprising in Iran – dubbing it the ‘first feminist revolution in the world’. Not so, argues Rahila Gupta, as she examines its precursor: a Kurdish feminist revolution in Rojava.

Buy this magazine

NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Illustration: Andy K

Control alt delete

In India, a Hindu supremacist government is intent on erasing the country’s Islamic history. Tarushi Aswani reports.

Buy this magazine

NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Photo: World Day/Shutterstock

The denial syndrome

Faced with monumental change, we all tend to convince ourselves that our lives will continue unscathed. In the first of our new series, with picks from the New Internationalist archive, we go back to 1990 when Anuradha Vittachi explained why, in the case of climate change, denial – that basic human trait – could bring about our downfall.

Buy this magazine

NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
From Raqs Media Collective’s ‘Three Shadows’,  exhibited as part of their exhibition ‘The Laughter of Tears’ at Kunstverein Braunschweig, 2021.Photo: Raqs Media Collective

Present assignation

Art does not simply reflect the world – but frames and shapes our future. A meditation by the Raqs Media Collective.

Buy this magazine

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

What would your grandchild say?

Wales is pioneering a law supposed to ensure that public organizations protect future generations, as well as the living. Rebecca Wilks explores the results so far.

Buy this magazine

NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
Following an uprising in the early 1990s, a status of ‘frozen conflict’ in Southern Mexico allowed communities to develop democratic practices through ongoing organization and political education. Here, the Zapatista Army of National Liberation’s Rafael Sebastián Guillén Vicente, known as Subcommandante Marcos or Delegate Zero, meets with community activists in the Emiliana de Zubeldia auditorium in October 2006.Photo: Luis Gutierrez/NortePhoto.com/Alamy

Decision time

Nick Dowson looks to the future of democracy – and considers how we can make it our own.

Buy this magazine

NI 542 - A world to win - March, 2023
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.

Buy this magazine

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.

Buy this magazine

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.

Buy this magazine

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.

Buy this magazine

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.

Buy this magazine

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.

Buy this magazine

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

Articles in this category displayed as a table:

Article title From magazine Publication date
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 2023
Loneliness May, 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
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
A world to win March, 2023
A world to win March, 2023
The cost of living crisis January, 2023
Back