8320, 8324, 8415, 8493, 8496, 8457, 8459, 8416, 8471 How ambitious is Joe Biden’s pledge to cut US emissions by 50 per cent? The US will struggle to hit its own climate target – but some argue it should have aimed even higher. By Emily Tamkin
8268, 8332 The defeat of the European Super League has shown another football is possible Human spirit has triumphed over the brutal logic of the market – now fans must truly take control of their clubs. By Paul Mason
8268, 8395 How Northern Ireland’s paramilitaries exploit the social housing system Residential segregation and the influence it gives paramilitaries in poor urban neighbourhoods continues to fuel violence. By Kaitlin M. Ball
8415, 8457, 8459, 8460, 8416, 8468 Can the United States work with India to counter China? The two countries know they need to work together, but will having a common enemy be enough? By Emily Tamkin
8268, 8445, 8517, 8415, 8416, 8469, 8471 The age of consequences: the future for which left environmentalism is unprepared Progressives struggle with a disturbing truth: the climate crisis is going to get much worse no matter what, and eco-nationalists are poised to exploit this fact. By Laurie Laybourn-Langton
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, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8462 Can Armin Laschet guide Germany’s fractured Christian Democrats to victory? As the German Greens surge, Angela Merkel’s putative successor faces a formidable election test. By Jeremy Cliffe
8320, 8323, 8415, 8457, 8462, 8416, 8470 Will France's anti-Le Pen “republican front” hold? The balance of probabilities is still that the far-right leader will lose next year – but by the slimmest margin a Le Pen ever has. By Ido Vock
8268, 8415, 8457, 8459, 8416 Will Biden’s presidency break the grip of Reaganism on US politics? By Emily Tamkin
8277, 8299, 8280, 8415, 8416, 8472, 8422, 8481, 8479 Seaspiracy: the overfishing documentary that became entangled in its own net The film’s over-simplification and outdated statistics risk adding to the challenges already facing the world’s oceans. By Freddie Hayward
8268, 8366, 8320, 8324, 8323, 8327, 8415, 8457, 8467, 8416, 8469, 8473 New Zealand’s three-day miscarriage leave is still not nearly enough Bringing pregnancy loss into line with other forms of bereavement entitlement is an important step – but it should only be the beginning of the conversation. By Emma Haslett
8320, 8321, 8325, 8415, 8456 Why is Israel doing so much better than Chile at coming out of lockdown? Both countries have high vaccination rates, but the difference in Covid case rates can serve as a lesson to the UK. By Nicu Calcea
8519, 8520 Super League: for once, the government has shown some teeth on a cross-border deal Was the government's response to the European Super League a one-off, or is it a sign that future interventions on foreign deals are more likely?
8519, 8521 Who benefits when the government pumps the housing market? The new mortgage guarantee scheme may have the same effect as other interventions, prolonging a buoyant market at the expense of affordability.
8519, 8522 Is the Dogecoin bubble as irrational as it looks? The joke currency is able to exploit the group psychology of the internet in ways that other investments cannot.
8519, 8520 What “Global Britain” really means: tax avoidance on an unprecedented scale As the US and EU press ahead with measure to combat corporate tax avoidance, the UK is dragging its heels.
8519, 8522, 8415, 8457, 8458, 8459 Madoff and me: How I lost my father to the world’s biggest Ponzi scheme Bernie Madoff, the man behind the most devastating financial fraud in history, has died. Willard Foxton reflects on how white-collar crime brought tragedy to his family.
8519, 8524 Business data shows the Nordics aren't as progressive as we think While the Nordic nations are rated as being among the most equal in the world, gender stereotypes prevail in many workplaces across the region.
8268, 8332, 8274 The Super League is dead – but the challenge for Boris Johnson lives on Calls for a more radical approach to how British football is run and regulated are not going to go away. By Stephen Bush
8300, 8363 Big Brother Watch’s Silkie Carlo: “The rule of law has broken down” The director of the civil liberties group on how Covid-19 has accelerated the creation of a dangerous surveillance state. By Rachel Cunliffe
8268, 8274 What does the EHRC report mean for Labour? In a landmark moment for equalities law, the party is facing a question that goes far beyond the issue of Jeremy Corbyn and anti-Semitism. By Ailbhe Rea
8268, 8296, 8269 Missing kits, wrong results and high prices: The great Covid-19 travel test rip-off A broken market of private test providers is frustrating the quarantine process and risking the spread of new variants. By Anoosh Chakelian
8268, 8275, 8517 David Cameron and the great sell-out Why the humiliation of the former prime minister is a fitting end to an era of politics that turned the state into a business. By John Gray
8277, 8279 The moonshot delusion Why the left is too starry-eyed on economics. By Aditya Chakrabortty
8277, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475 Musa Okwonga’s One of Them: an elegantly written memoir of his Eton days This detailed exploration of life at Eton slips along so gracefully that I spent the last few chapters in a state of horror that the book didn’t have much longer to run. By Stephen Bush
8277, 8279, 8415, 8422, 8475 Philip Roth and the repellent What is most disturbing in Blake Bailey’s biography is not Roth’s behaviour, but his biographer’s apparently unthinking alignment with it. By Erica Wagner
8277, 8280 The ghost of James Gandolfini in Enough Said Nicole Holofcener’s 2013 romantic comedy captures Gandolfini’s spirit and irrepressible charm. By Simran Hans
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
8320, 8300, 8455, 8415, 8456 Global Covid vaccine tracker: how long will lockdown last? Use the New Statesman's trackers to monitor the state of the global effort to vaccinate the world against Covid-19. By Michael Gooder, Georges Corbineau and Josh Rayman
8519, 8520, 8300, 8362, 8363, 8415, 8493 A new lawsuit against TikTok continues the backlash against Big Tech’s plans for children The hugely popular social network is one of several tech firms facing legal scrutiny for monetising children's internet usage. By Oscar Williams
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