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Alessio Perrone reports on Algeria’s marginalized Kabylia region, where the politics of identity has spilled over into football.
As president Bashar al-Assad’s regime tightens its grip on war-torn Syria, Sally Hayden reports from three government strongholds on life for ordinary citizens, who are seeking normality, even if rubble and memories are all they have left.
There has been a dramatic rise in heart disease in Africa over the past 25 years – a situation made worse by fake medicines on the market. Now doctors are beginning to fight for change, as Lea Surugue reports.
It is not rationality that unites us, but the fragility of our physical bodies. Tom Whyman finds a germ of optimism in the philosophy of the Frankfurt School.
The treatment of Myanmar’s Rohingya people has been seen as a genocide in the making. Parsa Sanjana Sajid visits those trapped on the Bangladeshi border.
Is the UN still capable of keeping the peace and protecting civilians? Was it ever? Ian Williams inspects the record.
Aid-by-drone, what’s not to like? Plenty, as Nick Dowson explains.
Mass starvation is making a comeback as a weapon of war. To tackle this great evil we must stop talking about food and over-population, and engage with the politics, argues Alex de Waal.
In 2011, Western donors sat back while 250,000 Somalis died of starvation. Then Turkey stepped in. Jamal Osman reports on the rise of aid from the Muslim world.
Hazel Healy investigates the challenges facing 21st century humanitarian action.
A Line in the River by Jamal Mahjoub; Political Tribes by Amy Chua; Building and Dwelling by Richard Sennett; Deport, Deprive, Extradite by Nisha Kapoor;
Your Queen Is a Reptile by Sons of Kemet and Radyo Siwèl, by Mélissa Laveaux.
A Fantastic Woman, written and directed by Sebastián Lelio; Custody (Jusqu’à la garde), written and directed by Xavier Legrand.
Article title | Description | Author | Published | Magazine | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
‘Repeal the eighth!’ | Update from Ireland by Megan Nolan. |
Megan Nolan | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
The away team | Alessio Perrone reports on Algeria’s marginalized Kabylia region, where the politics of identity has spilled over into football. |
Alessio Perrone | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
What remains | As president Bashar al-Assad’s regime tightens its grip on war-torn Syria, Sally Hayden reports from three government strongholds on life for ordinary citizens, who are seeking normality, even if rubble and memories are all they have left. |
Sally Hayden | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
When the drugs don’t work | There has been a dramatic rise in heart disease in Africa over the past 25 years – a situation made worse by fake medicines on the market. Now doctors are beginning to fight for change, as Lea Surugue reports. |
Lea Surugue | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
A new universalism | It is not rationality that unites us, but the fragility of our physical bodies. Tom Whyman finds a germ of optimism in the philosophy of the Frankfurt School. |
Tom Whyman | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
Rest for Rashida | The treatment of Myanmar’s Rohingya people has been seen as a genocide in the making. Parsa Sanjana Sajid visits those trapped on the Bangladeshi border. |
Parsa Sanjana Sajid | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
‘Them, the governments’ | Is the UN still capable of keeping the peace and protecting civilians? Was it ever? Ian Williams inspects the record. |
Ian Williams | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
The rise of the cyber-humanitarians | Aid-by-drone, what’s not to like? Plenty, as Nick Dowson explains. |
Nick Dowson | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
How can famines be ended? | Mass starvation is making a comeback as a weapon of war. To tackle this great evil we must stop talking about food and over-population, and engage with the politics, argues Alex de Waal. |
Alex de Waal | April, 2018 | 511 | Read |
How Turkey is winning hearts and minds | In 2011, Western donors sat back while 250,000 Somalis died of starvation. Then Turkey stepped in. Jamal Osman reports on the rise of aid from the Muslim world. |
Jamal Osman | April, 2018 | 511 | Read |
Humanitarian Action - The Facts | What do the numbers look like? |
April, 2018 | 511 | Buy | |
Who cares? | Hazel Healy investigates the challenges facing 21st century humanitarian action. |
Hazel Healy | April, 2018 | 511 | Buy |
Mixed Media: Books | A Line in the River by Jamal Mahjoub; Political Tribes by Amy Chua; Building and Dwelling by Richard Sennett; Deport, Deprive, Extradite by Nisha Kapoor; |
New Internationalist Editorial | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Mixed Media: Music | Your Queen Is a Reptile by Sons of Kemet and Radyo Siwèl, by Mélissa Laveaux. |
New Internationalist Editorial | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Mixed Media: Film | A Fantastic Woman, written and directed by Sebastián Lelio; Custody (Jusqu’à la garde), written and directed by Xavier Legrand. |
New Internationalist Editorial | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |