Paul Barker

Articles by Paul Barker

Results 1 to 10 of 29

Hello, Ken. Goodbye, Oxford Street

  • 07 June 2004

D-Day - Tubes and trains are overcrowded, suburbia is ignored, and commercial areas are in decline. Four years on, has Ken Livingstone really made London a better place to live in?

Be afraid, be very afraid . . . of gum on the pavement and graffiti on the wall

  • 18 November 2002

Medieval handbooks laid down strict rules about spitting; today, staring may be an aggressive act. Paul Barker asks if Blair can win his war on antisocial behaviour

Sorry, but we don't want to live in flats

  • 30 September 2002

Ken Livingstone's vision for London is yet another example of how planners resist giving people the kind of housing they really want

A long wait on Alexanderplatz

  • 19 February 2001

A personal account of the frustrations of NHS queues

Sorry, but this is the working class

  • 25 September 2000

Loony tunes? Fascists? Paul Barker laments the left's snobbery towards the fuel tax protesters

The New Statesman Essay - Who's afraid of the class system?

  • 19 June 2000

Britain is now much more meritocratic than it gets credit for

Let people live where they wish

  • 13 March 2000

Paul Barker argues that John Prescott's attempts to restrict new house-building are wrong

The New Statesman Profile - Southwark borough

  • 13 December 1999

Once the stupidest borough in London, it is now a model of Blairite enterprise for a new Britain. The London borough of Southwark profiled

A womb without a view. The Great Exhibition of 1851 was a proud international statement. In contrast, argues Paul Barker, the Millennium Dome is a reflection of our parochial individual outlook

  • 13 December 1999

The Great Exhibition of 1851 Jeffrey A Auerbach Yale University Press, 256pp, £25 ISBN 0300080077 The Great Exhibition John R Davis Sutton Publishing, 256pp, £20

For the sake of the Lumley five

  • 29 November 1999

Focus on education - Paul Barkermeets one of new Labour's educational gurus and hears that comprehensives as we know them are "over and done with"

Fidel Castro

The last revolutionary

The last revolutionary

Steve Richards

On Tory policy

Our future in their hands

Science

Religion and Darwin

Since the dawn  of time

James Macintyre

Miliband's dilemma

Brussels is back with a vengeance

Will Self

On Oscar Wilde

Where the Wilde things are

Film review

Bright Star

Bright Star (PG)

Books

Paul Auster

Invisible

Interview

Alain de Botton

The Books Interview: Alain de Botton

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Was the government wrong to sack David Nutt?

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