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A record number of people lost their lives in UK immigration detention centres in 2017, writes Felix Bazalgette.
The struggle to define Russia’s future is under way but those hoping for a more progressive post-Putin Russia shouldn’t hold their breath, writes Tina Burrett.
In Koh Kong province, Cambodia a band of Mother Nature activists have scored a victory in the battle against environmentally destructive sand dredging writes Fran Lambrick.
Iceland's charismatic new Left-Green prime minister has big plans, but will the Left-Green's radical programme survive political wrangling with other coalition partners asks Richard Swift.
Latin American countries are seeing unprecedented growth in clean, cheap solar power writes Emily Earnshaw.
Two years since the murder of an Italian student in Cairo, the Egyptian regime has yet to acknowledge the nature of its involvement writes Yohann Koshy.
Eritrean refugees who try to escape into neighbouring Sudan are caught up in a deadly stand-off between East Africa’s big powers – as European Union (EU) money aimed at keeping them there continues to roll in all the while writes Sally Hayden.
In 2013, New Internationalist travelled to Mozambique to meet communities pushing back against expanding forestry plantations. Five years on, Nils Adler finds foreign companies have yet to deliver on promises to local farmers.
Noam Chomsky is a renowned linguist, the author of an abundance of books and arguably the most famous dissident intellectual in the United States. He talks to Andy Heintz about US exceptionalism, the best way to approach North Korea and the truth about ‘free trade agreements’.
As of February, Sudanese and Eritrean asylum seekers have begun receiving deportation notices from the Israeli government. What awaits them is either a prison sentence or a journey to Libya’s ‘brutal’ camps, as Nishtha Chugh reports.
Are you a non-black person unsure of how to support black struggles? Kristina Wong has some ideas for you.
Amy McQuire on why life and death are inseparable from land for Aboriginal people in Australia.
Kam Sandhu questions why the British working class is inevitably conceived of as white, despite ethnic minority communities being at the sharpest end of inequality.
In Brazil, young indigenous women are reconnecting with their African roots and finding ways to intervene in the violence that targets their community.
Article title | Description | Author | Published | Magazine | Link |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Detention deaths | A record number of people lost their lives in UK immigration detention centres in 2017, writes Felix Bazalgette. |
Felix Bazalgette | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Life after Putin | The struggle to define Russia’s future is under way but those hoping for a more progressive post-Putin Russia shouldn’t hold their breath, writes Tina Burrett. |
Tina Burrett | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Sand dredgers defeated | In Koh Kong province, Cambodia a band of Mother Nature activists have scored a victory in the battle against environmentally destructive sand dredging writes Fran Lambrick. |
Fran Lambrick | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Introducing... Katrín Jakobsdóttir | Iceland's charismatic new Left-Green prime minister has big plans, but will the Left-Green's radical programme survive political wrangling with other coalition partners asks Richard Swift. |
Richard Swift | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Here comes the sun | Latin American countries are seeing unprecedented growth in clean, cheap solar power writes Emily Earnshaw. |
Emily Earnshaw | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Justice for Giulio | Two years since the murder of an Italian student in Cairo, the Egyptian regime has yet to acknowledge the nature of its involvement writes Yohann Koshy. |
Yohann Koshy | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
HIV epidemic looms | Report from the Ukraine. |
Madeline Roache | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Between Sudan and a hard place | Eritrean refugees who try to escape into neighbouring Sudan are caught up in a deadly stand-off between East Africa’s big powers – as European Union (EU) money aimed at keeping them there continues to roll in all the while writes Sally Hayden. |
Sally Hayden | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
What the land grabbers did next | In 2013, New Internationalist travelled to Mozambique to meet communities pushing back against expanding forestry plantations. Five years on, Nils Adler finds foreign companies have yet to deliver on promises to local farmers. |
Nils Adler | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
'The goal should be to encourage people to think for themselves' | Noam Chomsky is a renowned linguist, the author of an abundance of books and arguably the most famous dissident intellectual in the United States. He talks to Andy Heintz about US exceptionalism, the best way to approach North Korea and the truth about ‘free trade agreements’. |
Andy Heintz | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
No promised land | As of February, Sudanese and Eritrean asylum seekers have begun receiving deportation notices from the Israeli government. What awaits them is either a prison sentence or a journey to Libya’s ‘brutal’ camps, as Nishtha Chugh reports. |
Nishtha Chugh | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Six ways to be a better ally | Are you a non-black person unsure of how to support black struggles? Kristina Wong has some ideas for you. |
Kristina Wong | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Our lives, our lands | Amy McQuire on why life and death are inseparable from land for Aboriginal people in Australia. |
Amy McQuire | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Working class in Britain? You must be white | Kam Sandhu questions why the British working class is inevitably conceived of as white, despite ethnic minority communities being at the sharpest end of inequality. |
Kam Sandhu | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |
Rivers of Meeting | In Brazil, young indigenous women are reconnecting with their African roots and finding ways to intervene in the violence that targets their community. |
Amy Hall | March, 2018 | 510 | Buy |