8320, 8324, 8415, 8457, 8459, 8416, 8470, 8472 What does Joe Biden’s $1.9trn stimulus mean for conservatives? After years in the wilderness under Donald Trump, the deficit-hawk strand on the US right has yet to reassert itself. By Nick Burns
8268, 8296, 8300, 8455 Mourning and melancholia: the psychological shadow-pandemic Why the Covid crisis is the biggest hit to mental health since the Second World War. By Sophie McBain
8320, 8322, 8415, 8457, 8460, 8416, 8472, 8473 Why the Covid recession has hit India’s millennials hard An unemployment crisis is crushing the country’s growth. By Vivan Marwaha
8300, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8496 How Covid-19 is creating the tech dystopia that we always feared Novelists had it right: plugged-in humans stare at screens all day as corporations become more powerful than governments. By Jamie Bartlett
8268, 8272 Piers Morgan shows why a celebrity journalist is a terrible thing The former Good Morning Britain host dabbles in the worst kind of editorial: shouting without listening. By Tanya Gold
8320, 8322, 8415, 8493, 8495, 8497, 8457, 8461, 8416, 8468, 8471, 8472 What China's Five-Year Plan means for the rest of the world Post-pandemic China is roaring back, but its new proposals on environment and Hong Kong should concern the West. By Jeremy Cliffe
8268, 8275, 8415, 8457, 8458 After Harry and Meghan, the monarchy faces a choice: change or perish Radical reform is inevitable as two factions of the electorate are now lined up behind two factions of the monarchy. By Paul Mason
8320, 8321, 8415, 8457, 8464, 8416, 8468 Mass famine looms in Yemen – and the international community is standing by A pledging conference organised by the UN raised less than half the sum required to avert famine in “the most fragile state in the world”. By Ido Vock
8519, 8522 Why privatising foreign aid doesn’t work Rather than triggering a surge in private sector investment, foreign aid cuts risk deterring businesses from investing in poorer nations. By Ben van der Merwe
8415, 8457, 8458, 8459, 8422, 8423 Harry and Meghan show the triumph of bohemian values over bourgeois ones The Sussexes are playing to a young, American audience who have no interest in obedience to tradition. By Louise Perry
8268, 8320, 8324, 8300, 8362, 8415, 8457, 8458, 8459 Why Twitter is a trap for politicians Social media entices public figures with its promises of stardom – but there too lies its danger. By Emily Tamkin
8517, 8320, 8415, 8456 Can humanity conquer Covid-19? Evolution has always been indifferent to the myth of inevitable human progress. Now, in the age of Covid-19, it has turned against us. By John Gray
8519, 8522 Why privatising foreign aid doesn’t work Rather than triggering a surge in private sector investment, foreign aid cuts risk deterring businesses from investing in poorer nations. Ben van der Merwe, Investment Monitor
8268, 8272, 8419 Why the media’s civil war over Meghan and Harry won’t end anytime soon Faced with a cultural divide over the royal family, publishers are doubling down on their stances.
8519, 8520 Will Deliveroo’s customers have an appetite for investing in the gig economy? Deliveroo is offering its users a bite out of its £5bn IPO. Will its users be hungry for profit, or put off by the company’s relationship with its self-employed riders?
8519 Why Amazon Fresh could split the high street The e-commerce giant's first physical shop outside the US will have profound consequences for the future of retail.
8519, 8520, 8523 Will Brexit make the UK economy greener? Manufacturers are waiting to see if the government will make the investments needed to kick-start a green industrial revolution. Philippa Nuttall Jones, Energy Monitor
8374, 8486 Inside Covid-19’s “lost year” for women at work The pressures of remote working and economic ruin have hit women hardest. What will the impact of Covid-19 on gender equality be in the long run?
8268, 8275, 8394 The Salmond inquiry has failed to unsettle the SNP, but the vaccine roll-out might Polls show support for Scottish independence has fallen and the problem can be traced back to a laboratory in Oxford. By Stephen Bush
8320, 8324, 8415, 8457, 8459, 8416, 8472 Leader: The quiet radical Joe Biden's $1.9trn stimulus package is an example of state activism that the world should emulate. By New Statesman
8320, 8321, 8415, 8457, 8464 Shamima Begum’s lawyer: “The court ruling shows there are grades of citizenship” Tasnime Akunjee on the legal quest to allow the schoolgirl who joined Isis to return to the UK. By Freddie Hayward
8268, 8275 Sarah Everard’s disappearance is a horrifying reminder that women live in fear of violence Women grow up conditioned to protect themselves from attack. But why should the onus be on us? By Alona Ferber
8268, 8272, 8274 The Society of Editors has made a familiar mistake on Meghan and Harry By Stephen Bush
8277, 8282, 8515, 8415, 8422, 8490 Israel Nash’s Topaz: sun-baked country rock in need of some frankness On his sixth album, the Americana musician subtly queries his place in a genre long associated with conservatism. By Ellen Peirson-Hagger
8277, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475 Yaa Gyasi on publishing's race problem and human recklessness The author is “obsessed” with the notion of inherited trauma, a theme that appears in her books Homegoing and Transcendent Kingdom. By Sarah Manavis
8268, 8366, 8277, 8279 Carol Dyhouse’s Love Lives examines how Cinderella stories shaped women’s expectations By focusing on fairy tales, Dyhouse gives a sense of narrative cohesion to the fitful, complex, uneven revolution in postwar family life. By Sophie McBain
8277, 8282, 8515, 8415, 8422, 8490 The Berlin Philharmonic’s “The Golden Twenties” brings to life the city of that decade From their plush "Digital Concert Hall" you can listen to Thomas Søndergård conduct the magnificent orchestra. By Kate Molleson
8277, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475 How Ishiguro rewrote himself The Nobel winner’s cryptic new novel is the result of a decades-long rejection of “well-formed” fiction. By Leo Robson
8519 What Nick Clegg isn’t telling us about Facebook’s fight with Australia Clegg fails to acknowledge the debt Facbook owes to professional journalism, or the competitive advantage it enjoys over news providers. By Dominic Ponsford
8300, 8455, 8302, 8415, 8456, 8493 How the pandemic made virtual reality mainstream As lockdowns encourage people to turn to technology for social connection, distraction and exercise, VR no longer seems an overpriced or mystifying pastime. By Sarah Manavis
8300, 8362, 8415, 8493 After U-turning in Australia, Facebook faces bigger battles elsewhere The social network has won concessions in its fight with the Australian government. But across the world politicians’ frustrations with the company have intensified. By Oscar Williams
8268, 8272, 8300, 8362, 8415, 8493, 8496 Why Facebook was right to block Australian news content The Australian government's demands on tech giants are unjustified and anti-competition. Now Facebook has called their bluff. By Sam Bowman
8300, 8362, 8303, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8496 Why debates about banning online anonymity miss the point Most digital abuse could be mitigated before a message is even seen by its target, if platforms took responsibility for what is published. By Sarah Manavis
8300, 8362, 8415, 8493, 8496, 8422, 8491 How influencers justify jet-setting to Dubai in the midst of lockdown Social media stars have always provided their followers with luxury escapism, should that change in a pandemic? By Sarah Manavis