Author and journalist Mark Lynas and researcher and writer Claire Robinson go head-to-head.
The award-winning author, poet and activist considers herself above all a daughter of the Earth, as she explains to Frank Barat.
Paul Rogers says the growing influence of home-grown and foreign fundamentalists makes a negotiated settlement even more urgent.
In the lead story from our May-June 2023 issue, Zoe Holman looks at how the so-called ‘peace process’ has allowed Israel to deepen its colonial project over Palestinian lives.
The musician, activist and former child soldier gives a sombre assessment of life in South Sudan two years after independence.
Despite populism being rife everywhere else, Japan has refused to succumb. Are there lessons to be learned? asks Tina Burrett.
Luke Dale-Harris reports on the ongoing battle to improve the rights of disabled people locked away in secretive Romanian institutions.
It won’t last, the young founders of New Internationalist were told 500 issues ago. Read the letter from this month's Editors.
A clamour to return to the status quo after Covid-19 would be bad news for people and the planet, argues Richard Swift. We may never get a better chance for a new normal.
Nick Dowson dismantles the notion that the private sector does things better.
India is looking at the world’s largest statelessness crisis. Nilanjana Bhowmick asks, have we learned nothing from the ongoing dispossession of Rohingya Muslims?
They may be losing popularity in Gaza, but Hamas are a force to be reckoned with – even by Israel. Louisa Waugh reports.
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