8320, 8324, 8415, 8457, 8459 The US call for a global minimum tax rate is an antidote to America First How US Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen's ambitious proposals could reshape globalisation for the better. By Emily Tamkin
8268, 8275 Prince Philip and the professors My encounters with the Duke of Edinburgh left the impression of a spontaneous, affable, practical royal. By Richard J Evans
8415, 8457, 8465, 8416, 8468, 8473 To understand Mozambique's insurgency look at local unrest, not global jihad What began as a homegrown Islamic protest movement in the country’s north is metastasizing, along with the crisis it created. By Tristan McConnell
8320, 8323, 8300, 8365, 8302, 8415, 8457, 8462, 8416, 8468, 8471, 8472 Greenland's election result sends a message of environmental hope The triumph of the Inuit Ataqatigiit party tells “dirty” mining to clean up its act. By India Bourke
8320, 8322, 8415, 8457, 8463, 8416, 8473 How total violence has become the Myanmar military's chosen route to power In spite of continuing anti-coup protests, the junta's long reliance on the rule of force remains immovable. By Francis Wade
8320, 8322, 8415, 8457, 8463 “Capitalism has become a weapon of mass destruction”: Seven questions with Arundhati Roy The prize-winning writer shares her thoughts on India, nationalism, literature and politics. By Emily Tamkin
8517, 8415, 8416, 8469 Meritocracy and the future of work Why we must overcome the “cult of intelligence”. By Justin E. H. Smith
8268, 8387, 8320, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8458, 8462, 8416, 8468, 8469 After Brexit: why there has been no “domino effect” in Europe Eurosceptic politicians are now more likely to look to Viktor Orbán’s Hungary for inspiration than to the UK. By Ido Vock
8268, 8328, 8275, 8415, 8457, 8458, 8416, 8469 Why we must build a new civic covenant The Covid crisis can enable us to reimagine how we live together and renew the foundations of our economy. By Adrian Pabst and Ron Ivey
8320, 8322, 8415, 8457, 8463, 8416, 8468, 8470 “Practically no effect”: The minimal impact of sanctions over Hong Kong Even as exiled activities fight to keep democratic hopes alive, China’s crackdown on autonomy continues apace. By Jessie Lau
8320, 8324, 8415, 8457, 8459, 8416, 8468, 8473 The executed innocent: Why justice for Ethel Rosenberg still matters How a new investigation into a 1951 spy trial exposed long-running injustices committed in the name of US security. By Emily Tamkin
8268, 8275, 8320, 8324, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8458, 8459 The 1990s: An age without qualities Often heralded as the best decade ever, the 1990s brought dark warnings about the future – and many have come to pass. By Gavin Jacobson
8519 “The left was deplatformed long before the right”: Jillian C York on social media's war on content The director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation warns that often conversation around online speech is “uninformed” or “misinformed”.
8519, 8520 Why the global shipping crisis is here to stay A global imbalance of containers, congestion at ports and the shaky economics of shipping itself could leave businesses with high costs until at least 2022.
8519, 8415, 8416, 8472 How two businessmen wrote the rules of globalisation Hartley Shawcross and Hermann Josef Abs’ 1950s dream has come to define investor-state relations.
8519, 8522 Mark Carney’s Value(s) is a guide to saving the planet for the 0.1 per cent The former central banker aims his observations on the climate crisis at the people with the power and money to make a difference. Can we expect them to listen?
8519, 8523, 8445, 8269, 8300, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8497, 8457, 8459 How the polar vortex wreaked havoc on the automotive industry Texan snowstorms have led to the closure of car production plants across the world. Could rising Arctic temperatures be to blame?
8519, 8523 Why asset managers aren’t solving the climate crisis The promises of sustainable investment from firms that manage trillions of dollars ignore the inadequacies of the system in which they operate.
8268, 8415, 8457, 8458 Prince Philip: Reactions and Tributes The Duke of Edinburgh and husband of Queen Elizabeth II has died aged 99. By New Statesman
8268, 8328, 8394 Independent or not, Scotland must get over its fear of business When was the last time a Scottish cabinet minister made a speech about the vital role the private sector plays in funding public spending and creating jobs? By Chris Deerin
8268, 8275, 8274, 8395 Stormont faces a near-impossible task in quelling tensions in Northern Ireland How can the DUP, helping to stoke discontent, speak as one with Sinn Féin, the target of much of that anger? By Ailbhe Rea
8268, 8275 Why you should take the tongue-in-cheek Northern Independence Party seriously Like other pop-ups – from Italy's Five Star Movement to the Brexit Party – the NIP has the potential to crack the political faultlines wide open. By James Meadway
8268, 8274 Something was missing from the government's announcement on AstraZeneca People are being denied the chance to make a genuinely informed decision about the AstraZeneca vaccine. By Stephen Bush
8268, 8275, 8320, 8324, 8323, 8415, 8416, 8468 Is "Global Britain" losing its voice? After six decades at the forefront of American-European relations, Britain had considerable influence. Now it has left the EU, will it still be heard? By Harry Lambert
8277, 8282, 8515 I was a teenage Taylor Swift fan – before Fearless, she was our little secret The success of Swift’s breakthrough record was a bittersweet moment for us, her earliest British superfans. By Sarah Carson
8277, 8283, 8415, 8422, 8476 The secrets that make The Circle the best reality show on television On paper, The Circle shouldn't work. So how did it become TV's most unique reality series? By Sarah Manavis
8277, 8283 Thanks to The Crown, Prince Philip will be immortalised as an anti-hero The late Duke of Edinburgh was both vilified and vindicated by The Crown; for younger generations, this is how we will remember him. By Eleanor Peake
8277, 8278, 8518, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475, 8485 How Georges Simenon found his eye In the 1930s, the creator of Maigret travelled the world as a journalist. His photographs reveal an artistic sensibility captivated by the camera’s ability to stop time. By William Boyd
8277, 8279 Gwendoline Riley: “I’m interested in a person’s helplessness, how people are incorrigible” The writer on why the word “gaslighting” has lost all meaning, squirrels and her sixth novel, My Phantoms. By Leo Robson
8268, 8332, 8277, 8299, 8415, 8422, 8423 Keep your wild swimming – I lost my heart to municipal swimming pools A council swimming pool is for everyone – you can bob around in the shallow end or take a family of five for a magical experience for less than the price of a pizza. By Charlotte Ivers
8300, 8303, 8415, 8493, 8496 Bellingcat founder Eliot Higgins: “A 16-year-old could do what I'm doing” The head of the celebrated investigative website on open-source sleuthing, mistrust in governments and how to prevent online radicalisation. By Sarah Manavis
8300, 8362, 8303 How gossip forum Tattle Life became the most toxic place on the internet On Tattle Life, influencers and celebrities exist for one purpose: to have the details of their personal lives doxxed and their every move torn apart. By Sarah Manavis
8519, 8521, 8300, 8363, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8495 Are Apple and Google weaponising privacy? The US tech giants stand accused of co-opting EU legislation to reinforce their market power. By Oscar Williams
8268, 8272, 8419, 8300, 8362, 8415, 8493, 8495 Tech giants should pay the price for the abuse posted on their sites Julie Burchill’s harassment of Ash Sarkar was enabled by an effective multi-billion dollar a year subsidy handed by nation states to Facebook and Twitter. By Dominic Ponsford
8300, 8362, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8495, 8496 Shoshana Zuboff on why Big Tech is the biggest threat to democracy The author of The Age of Surveillance Capitalism believes the expanding empire of technology behemoths poses an existential risk. By Freddie Hayward
8519, 8300, 8364, 8303, 8302, 8415, 8493, 8495, 8496 The UK’s former cyber chief warns against retaliatory attacks on China and Russia Ciaran Martin, the ex-CEO of the National Cyber Security Centre, discusses the defence review, Beijing’s latest hack and politicians’ appetite for digital weapons. By Oscar Williams