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Jeremy Seabrook

Articles by Jeremy Seabrook

Results 11 to 18 of 18

Down and out above an Indian restaurant

  • 20 November 2000

Jeremy Seabrook meets an economic migrant from Dhaka, doing his bit to keep UK inflation in check

The New Statesman Essay - Goodbye to provincial life

  • 18 September 2000

They were snobbish, repressive, dull. Yet provincial towns once gave people a sense of identity and security

Young women going into the dark

  • 28 August 2000

In Bangladesh, families push their daughters into marriage when they are still children because they think they are safer that way, reports Jeremy Seabrook

Invisible children of the south

  • 26 June 2000

The west is very keen to clear its conscience of child workers in clothing and toy factories. But most face even worse conditions elsewhere

Peas in pods - what the hell are they?

  • 07 February 2000

Don't blame the schools for children's ignorance. The real teachers of the young are the advertisers and PR merchants, argues Jeremy Seabrook

Even the babies are put to work

  • 19 March 1999

Britain's empire allowed it to abolish child labour at home; Bangladesh has no such option

When first-world man met third-world boy

  • 29 January 1999

Jeremy Seabrookpaid Jun's college fees but declined sex in return. Now he questions his own motives

10,000 memories in Nelson, Lancashire

  • 27 November 1998

Here, the old cotton mill workers recall noise, bullying and hunger. Now, in Asia, a new generation experiences the same conditions

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