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Honey trap

Honey trap

Report on beekeeping in Kitui, Kenya by Shadrack Omuka.

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Bugging Democracy

Bugging Democracy

State surveillance in Greece, by Bethany Rielly.

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 Illustration: Emma Peer

Introducing... Petr Pavel

The former NATO general and 2022 Czech president elect.

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 Photo: Christopher Michel

Legal time travel

Report on Shahidul Alam's criminal case by Kabir Agarwal.

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Soldiers within the Lachin corridor, which links Nagorno-Karabakh with Armenia, on 24 December 2022. Photo: Marut Vanyan/Le Pictorium/Alamy

Greenwashing Aggression

Report on the violent expansion on environmental pretexts in Azerbaijan by Matt Broomfield.

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Elder Taharakau Stewart (in the middle with cane), is joined by other Māori people during a ceremony in Berlin, Germany on 29 April 2019. The event marked the handing back of the remains of ancestors which had been held as part of Charité – Berlin University of Medicine’s former anthropology collections. Photo: Jörg Carstensen/DPA/Alamy

‘They are my ancestors’

For centuries, museums have held human remains as artefacts – including those sold, looted and smuggled out of colonized countries. Hana Pera Aoake explains how New Zealand/Aotearoa has become a world-leader in repatriation. What can be learned from the Indigenous-led programme driving the push to bring ancestors home?

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Celebrations ahead of travelling to the annual 18-day transgender festival in Koovagam, Tamil Nadu, India on 22 April 2013. Photo: Arun Sankar K/AP Photo/Alamy

The trans revolution

In a time of toxic ‘culture wars’, it may be hard to see the liberating potential of transgender rights for us all. But this piece from 2015, by Vanessa Baird, did just that – while taking a pop at the tyranny of the binary.

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San Matías Chilazoa resident Alejandrino Pérez shows off a little bull he had made from mud at one of the village reservoirs. Photo: Noel Rojo

Hope in the water

After 17 years, Zapotec Indigenous communities in Mexico finally gain control over their water sources, reports Magdalena Rojo.

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Rapper Hichkas is surrounded by people wearing photos of victims of the regime, as he speaks at a protest to commemorate ‘Bloody November’ in The Hague, the Netherlands, on 19 November 2022. Photo: Sopa Images Limited/Alamy

‘I am not going to stay quiet’

Rap is a genre intertwined with politics, but the political courage of Iran’s rappers takes some beating, Lorraine Mallinder finds.

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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.

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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.

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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.

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 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.

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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.

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 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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Search results in a table:

Article title Description Author Published Magazine Link
Honey trap

Report on beekeeping in Kitui, Kenya by Shadrack Omuka.

Shadrack Omuka May, 2023 543 Buy
Bugging Democracy

State surveillance in Greece, by Bethany Rielly.

Bethany Rielly May, 2023 543 Buy
Introducing... Petr Pavel

The former NATO general and 2022 Czech president elect.

Richard Swift May, 2023 543 Buy
Legal time travel

Report on Shahidul Alam's criminal case by Kabir Agarwal.

Kabir Agarwal May, 2023 543 Buy
Greenwashing Aggression

Report on the violent expansion on environmental pretexts in Azerbaijan by Matt Broomfield.

Matt Broomfield May, 2023 543 Buy
‘They are my ancestors’

For centuries, museums have held human remains as artefacts – including those sold, looted and smuggled out of colonized countries. Hana Pera Aoake explains how New Zealand/Aotearoa has become a world-leader in repatriation. What can be learned from the Indigenous-led programme driving the push to bring ancestors home?

Hana Pera Aoake May, 2023 543 Buy
The trans revolution

In a time of toxic ‘culture wars’, it may be hard to see the liberating potential of transgender rights for us all. But this piece from 2015, by Vanessa Baird, did just that – while taking a pop at the tyranny of the binary.

Vanessa Baird May, 2023 543 Buy
Hope in the water

After 17 years, Zapotec Indigenous communities in Mexico finally gain control over their water sources, reports Magdalena Rojo.

Magdalena Rojo May, 2023 543 Buy
‘I am not going to stay quiet’

Rap is a genre intertwined with politics, but the political courage of Iran’s rappers takes some beating, Lorraine Mallinder finds.

Lorraine Mallinder May, 2023 543 Buy
Tough love

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

Conrad Landin May, 2023 543 Buy
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.

Husna Ara May, 2023 543 Buy
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.

Tooba Syed May, 2023 543 Buy
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.

Daisy Schofield May, 2023 543 Buy
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.

Ishika Saxena May, 2023 543 Buy
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.

Eve Livingston May, 2023 543 Buy