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Israel and Hamas

All of our coverage of the conflict in one place

The best of the year

Our annual guides to the finest cultural treats

Boss Class

Our podcast series on good management asks how to motivate staff

Business

The Sam Altman drama points to a deeper split in the tech world

Doomers and boomers are fighting for AI dominance

The Americas

Is Argentina’s new president too divisive to fix a broken economy?

Javier Milei’s libertarian policies may be too radical to pass, or to work


Middle East & Africa

What happens to Gaza after the war?

No one wants responsibility for running and rebuilding the ruined enclave




The world in brief

Argentina elected Javier Milei, a self-proclaimed “anarcho-capitalist”, as its president...

Almost three-quarters of OpenAI staff urged their board to resign, after it sacked the company’s boss, Sam Altman, on Friday...

Israeli tanks were reportedly closing in on the Indonesian hospital in northern Gaza...

Zambia’s official creditors, co-led by China and France, stopped the country’s efforts to restructure $3bn of its debt...


Why Britain’s Treasury must change its ways

The problems with the most powerful department in Whitehall

Schumpeter: How to think about the Google anti-monopoly trial

As told by “The Man Who Ate Microsoft”

Why Central Americans migrate to the United States when they do

Researchers pin down the role of climate change

The World Ahead Obituary

Reflections on paperlessness, in the spirit of Ogden Nash

As several airlines prepare to phase out paper boarding passes in 2024, our obituarist laments the decline of paper tickets of all kinds

Israel and Hamas

All of our coverage of the conflict in one place

The best of the year

Our annual guides to the finest cultural treats

Boss Class

Our podcast series on good management asks how to motivate staff

War between Israel and Hamas

Was Israel’s attack on al-Shifa hospital justified?

Israel has so far offered little evidence that it was. More may yet turn up

Many Arab governments would like to see Hamas gone

And they worry that the war in Gaza will upset their economic plans


The rights and wrongs of Israel and Hamas at al-Shifa hospital

Why Israel must meet and exceed the requirements of the laws of war


The battle of northern Gaza is almost over

But a dire humanitarian situation in the south is getting worse



Explore our full coverage

World news

The world is ignoring war, genocide and famine in Sudan

America is distracted, the UN is not interested

1843 magazine | The Dutch farmers’ revolt

Can they convert protest to power at the general election?


Joe Biden and Xi Jinping rediscover the joy of talking. Good

Military contacts between America and China resume. Will they last?



Business, finance and economics

How the young should invest

Markets have dealt them a bad hand. They could be playing it better

Three climate fights will dominate COP28

Whether the summit ends in breakdown or breakthrough depends on one man


Ray Dalio is a monster, suggests a new book. Is it fair?

The founder of the world’s largest hedge fund comes under scrutiny


Joe Biden’s failures on trade benefit China

A new disappointment for Asian free-traders


The Economist reads

What to read about Argentina

Seven books shed light on a troubled and paradoxical country

Six books you didn’t know were propaganda

Governments influence a surprising amount of literature. Some of it pretty good


What to read to understand international relations

Five books that explain the forces shaping geopolitics


What to read to understand America’s opioid epidemic

Five books and one TV series lay bare the corruption, criminality, heartbreak and hope that are all facets of a decades-long crisis


Great reads

Ridley Scott’s “Napoleon” cuts the emperor down to size

His epic new film shows how hard it is to make a good biopic

Vivian Silver knew no good could ever come of war

The veteran Canadian-Israeli peace activist has been confirmed killed on October 7th, aged 74


The business of mining literary estates is booming

As “Wonka” shows, long-dead authors’ work has become lucrative


Silicon Valley is piling into the business of snooping

Tech upstarts are selling their wares to America’s police


Ukraine’s long war

The World Ahead Europe in 2024

The war in Ukraine may be heading for stalemate

Some big decisions will need to be made

From Gaza to Ukraine, wars and crises are piling up

How diplomats and generals are running out of bandwidth



A year after its liberation, Kherson still knows fear—and defiance

Russia continually lobs shells at the Ukrainian city


Visual storytelling

Inside a month of America’s school shootings

The hidden impacts of gun crime are devastating and poorly understood

Mapping Israel’s war in Gaza

Our satellite tracking of the conflict with Hamas, updated regularly


Western values are steadily diverging from the rest of the world’s

People’s principles were expected to align as countries got richer. What happened?


Large, creative AI models will transform lives and labour markets

They bring enormous promise and peril. But how do they work?


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Featured read

Some progressives are arguing for a religious right to abortion

The Supreme Court’s deference to faith-based objectors has buoyed their claims

Donald Trump poses the biggest danger to the world in 2024
Special reports: The new economy net zero needs

Special reports: November 25th 2023

The new economy net zero needs

Removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere is a necessity to which the world is not paying enough attention—and could be the foundation of a new carbon economy, our correspondents report