
Peter Tatchell: “It’s important the left doesn’t resort to the methods of the right”
The human rights campaigner reflects on cancel culture and life as an activist.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
The human rights campaigner reflects on cancel culture and life as an activist.
ByJess Phillips speaking openly about contracting HPV is admirable, but why is there stigma still attached to the virus?
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByThe evidence suggests that the Delta and Gamma variants are more dangerous for everyone, including young people.
ByTwo new books argue politics is too often arrogantly distant from the things that really matter.
ByIn the 19th century Garibaldi united a divided country. Today’s polarised politics could benefit from his pragmatic idealism.
ByIn his new book Seven Ways to Change the World, the former prime minister achieves a fluency in prose…
ByAnthro-Vision by Tett, Napoleon: A Life in Gardens and Shadows by Scurr, The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock by White and Red…
ByWhy the artist was hailed by Aaron Burr as “the first painter that now is or ever has been…
ByThe pandemic has destroyed countless community and public assets, but the power of local identity remains vital to our recovery.…
ByFifty years on, the record still feels like a puff of air between your ribs.
ByRecorded on location at the RSPB Strumpshaw Fen, the programme is peppered with birdsong and the buzz of grasshoppers, giving…
ByIn this tedious and excruciating film, Sharon Horgan and James McAvoy play a warring couple trapped together in lockdown.
ByA well-meaning scientist with an interest in mushrooms travels to a remote ecological centre in the aftermath of an…
ByAs free-market globalisation recedes, countries from the US to the UK to China are embracing national capitalism.
ByFour years ago these two eminent scientists bet on the likelihood of a man-made global biological disaster. Is it…
ByHow the US and Russia became entangled.
ByThe French novelist reflects on the work of Nelson Mandela, being painted by Chagall and 18th century French literature.
ByEmail emily.bootle@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman's Subscriber of the Week.
ByWhy the round-the-clock helpline is a false economy.
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByThere are more bees in the garden than I have ever seen before, more butterflies, more moths, more everything.
ByA sprightly step and a fairly steep downhill slope, and what do you get? A fall.
ByTillingham’s has the pleasant sourness of grapefruit, Little Waddon gushes pear juice, and if the Black Mountain was too…
ByFor defenders of the industry, it is the genetic link that matters, not the long months of pregnancy that…
ByWhat came out of the talks was a cluster of middling commitments, rehashed versions of older ideas, unfunded aspirations…
ByAn issue as complex and sensitive as the Northern Ireland protocol won't get fixed during a weekend in Cornwall.
BySince last summer I have loitered with intent in Switzerland, Sicily and Greece. Am I a modern-day Typhoid Mary?
ByThere is appetite in the cabinet for having difficult conversations with the country on Covid – but some MPs fear this…
ByAfter initially refusing to condemn the booing of players, this government appears to have realised that this is a team…
ByThe England manager understands the need for a patriotism that is generous and enhances national cohesion.
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByThe rapid spread of the Delta variant was not an inevitability but the result of the government’s failure to control…
ByRecorded on location at the RSPB Strumpshaw Fen, the programme is peppered with birdsong and the buzz of grasshoppers, giving…
ByIn this tedious and excruciating film, Sharon Horgan and James McAvoy play a warring couple trapped together in lockdown.
ByA well-meaning scientist with an interest in mushrooms travels to a remote ecological centre in the aftermath of an…
ByIn his new book Seven Ways to Change the World, the former prime minister achieves a fluency in prose…
ByAnthro-Vision by Tett, Napoleon: A Life in Gardens and Shadows by Scurr, The Twelve Lives of Alfred Hitchcock by White and Red…
ByThe French novelist reflects on the work of Nelson Mandela, being painted by Chagall and 18th century French literature.
ByJess Phillips speaking openly about contracting HPV is admirable, but why is there stigma still attached to the virus?
ByEmail emily.bootle@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be the New Statesman's Subscriber of the Week.
ByYour weekly dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByWhy the round-the-clock helpline is a false economy.
ByFor defenders of the industry, it is the genetic link that matters, not the long months of pregnancy that…
ByWhat came out of the talks was a cluster of middling commitments, rehashed versions of older ideas, unfunded aspirations…
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s Richard II, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByAn issue as complex and sensitive as the Northern Ireland protocol won't get fixed during a weekend in Cornwall.
ByThere are more bees in the garden than I have ever seen before, more butterflies, more moths, more everything.
ByA sprightly step and a fairly steep downhill slope, and what do you get? A fall.
BySince last summer I have loitered with intent in Switzerland, Sicily and Greece. Am I a modern-day Typhoid Mary?
ByTillingham’s has the pleasant sourness of grapefruit, Little Waddon gushes pear juice, and if the Black Mountain was too…
ByThere is appetite in the cabinet for having difficult conversations with the country on Covid – but some MPs fear this…
ByA selection of the best letters received from our readers this week. Email letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced…
ByThe rapid spread of the Delta variant was not an inevitability but the result of the government’s failure to control…
ByAfter initially refusing to condemn the booing of players, this government appears to have realised that this is a team…
ByThe ex-Congressman and convicted sex offender raises the question: can the commodification of shame really bring about ethical redemption?
ByThe evidence suggests that the Delta and Gamma variants are more dangerous for everyone, including young people.
ByThe England manager understands the need for a patriotism that is generous and enhances national cohesion.
By