
Leader: A turning point in history
A Russian invasion of Ukraine would be the biggest crisis in Europe since the end of the Cold War.
ByA Russian invasion of Ukraine would be the biggest crisis in Europe since the end of the Cold War.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByWe can’t stand up militarily to Putin’s Russia. But a London cleaned of dirty money and with a more…
ByEvery week that goes by with the Prime Minister still in office further toxifies the party’s reputation and humiliates…
ByIf Western leaders cannot stand up to Putin, they should not be in the business of geopolitics at all.
ByWe know that populist dictators are emboldened by each other’s atrocities, so how many more disappearances will it take…
ByFar from defending privacy, the series is formed by and fuels a culture of exploitation. Where will the titillation…
ByIt is laughable to suggest the 19 officers who sent disturbingly sexist and racist messages are not reflective of…
ByReflecting on my tenure, the greatest joy of working at the NS has been hearing from the kind, funny,…
ByObserving that many men are resistant to social change, the French historian wants to reimagine the cultures and norms…
ByUkrainians have been told to wait, but the uncertainty makes normal life increasingly impossible.
ByThe Ukrainian novelist Andrey Kurkov writes how life in his country feels – mostly – ordinary.
ByThe Chinese authorities have long treated the region – and its people – with suspicion. The abuses there can…
ByHow China’s Uyghur population became the target of a merciless campaign of collective punishment.
ByShaped over centuries by pilgrimage, trade, art and war, a unique culture has been suppressed and exploited by Beijing.…
ByThe metaverse promises infinite new realms just as tangible as the one we will leave behind.
ByPhilip Oltermann’s The Stasi Poetry Circle reveals how the GDR taught its spies to use verse as an ideological…
ByThe Brick Lane author’s first novel in a decade is overstuffed but delightfully so.
ByWorn by Thanhauser, Cold Enough for Snow by Au, A Terrible Kindness by Wroe and The Global Merchants by…
ByIn a series of specially commissioned poems, the writer who left China in 2010 refuses to be “defined by…
ByThe director has radically revised the physical challenges of his hero – and finds in Peter Dinklage the perfect…
ByTheroux is braver than he used to be, flushing out his interviewees' politics and reducing them to tantrums.
ByA delightful mix of science, history and feminism, BBC Radio 4’s Political Animals explores what animal sexuality reveals about…
ByIn those first hopeful and clear-skied days of February I felt a rush of affection for my scruffy little…
ByAfter saying yes to a beginner’s game I was pleased to discover that, while bad, I was by no…
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
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ByThe artist and Prodigy frontman on Nelson Mandela, Salvador Dali and why he's happy right now.
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