
Ben Judah: The ruthlessness of Vladimir Putin
How the Russian leader keeps his grip on power.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
How the Russian leader keeps his grip on power.
ByVladimir Putin’s military intervention is less about defeating Isis than about establishing himself as the ultimate counter-revolutionary leader.
ByCorbyn’s ideas may echo George Orwell’s – but they’d need Orwell’s Britain to work. It’s time Corbyn accepted the…
ByTerence Trent D’Arby’s 1987 debut album sold a million copies in three days. The music press went mad for…
ByBegun in 1914 and premiered in 1925, Wozzeck has class struggle, poverty and mental health problems as its principal…
ByEconomic and social inequality is rising, threatening to eclipse even the levels of division seen in the “gilded age”…
ByIn 2013, a local paper reported on a strange script chiselled into a stone that had baffled not only…
ByRather than merely winning again, the Conservatives are seeking to inflict permanent damage on the opposition.
ByFrom Theresa May on immigration to Jeremy Hunt on tax credits, senior Conservatives are ruining the leadership's attempts to…
ByThe imminent cuts to tax credits – given to four and a half million Britons to supplement low-paid work…
ByThe problem with automation isn’t technology. The problem is capitalism.
ByHealey, who has died aged 98, persuaded the public that he was a jolly and rather lovable character. That…
ByA reflection on Denis Healey (1917 - 2015) in this piece from the NS archive from 1981.
ByYou vow to do yoga, read fiction, grow stuff – beards, vegetables – but it’s only talk. Before you…
By“Is there life on Mars?” seemed like an epoch-defining question.
ByLynton Crosby is friendly to Labour only in the manner of a dingo putting a limping kangaroo out of its…
ByBritain’s portraits tell stories of subversion and obsession in a book which reveals something new on every page.
ByOur cultures show that we can select who we are and who we want to be – but can…
ByThe sceptical doubt that infuses Conrad’s work – particularly his last great novel, Victory – has to do with…
ByThe proportion of those on the smallest incomes participating in sport has reached a new low.
ByIt's time to take stock of rugby, and see what us football fans have learned.
ByTo be a woman in the public eye these days, or actually anyone who can operate a Twitter account,…
ByJihadists have long operated in the Caucasus and they have been re-energised by the Syrian conflict.
ByYanagihara’s Booker-shortlisted novel explores abuse but sheds little new light on her subject.
ByRobert Geoffrey Ellis was Tory MP for Wakefield (1922-23 and 1924-29) and Sheffield Ecclesall (1935-45). In between, he was…
ByWith his new book of popular science, Carlo Rovelli has struck gold.
ByChrissie Hynde has been accused of victim blaming. But her plight seems to me very much the plight of…
ByA “structured reality” show about pensioners in Bournemouth, plus Unforgotten.
ByThis Canadian version of an old standard is a good substitute for dinner.
ByHistory, which we learn about as a series of ideological abstractions, is lived concretely - in ordinary houses.
ByDoubtless Welby’s supporters will find such a description rude to the point of impiousness – but for those of…
ByWhere Bob Dylan fits 45 words into a six-word line, Lennon could be sorcerously expansive, as John Lennon: Verbatim reminds us.
ByA snapshot of Kosovo.
BySahota’s Man Booker-shortlisted novel goes to places we would all rather not think about.
ByCary Fukunaga's latest film is fiercely loyal to the perspective of its young protagonist as he negotiates the horrors…
ByThe fridge has become, literally, unhinged. What now?
ByThe app claims that “character is destiny”, and that we should be constantly judged based on our past interactions…
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