
Bill Gates’ warning to the world
The optimistic, liberal spirit of the early aughts has given way to darker times.
ByNew Times,
New Thinking.
The optimistic, liberal spirit of the early aughts has given way to darker times.
ByWrite to letters@newstatesman.co.uk to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
ByYour daily dose of gossip from around Westminster.
ByHow Donald Trump will keep his coalition of support together amid his cabinet’s competing ideologies.
ByAlso this week: meditations on love and loss, and the bliss of the Berlin Philarmonic.
ByThe great chronicler of England’s traumas on class, national identity and the importance of football novels.
ByIf we want to invest in security, we need to be able to fund it.
ByPlus: new White House appointments and more media sales.
ByElectoral pushback will not be the last popular revolt against progressive policies.
ByCompassion leads one to feel with another person. But that does not tell us what is right.
BySocial democracy is increasingly looking weak and timid, even cowardly.
ByThere is a particular pleasure in scuttling off to the local dive with its carpeted loos and well-worn chairs.
ByThe philanthropist has been fighting global disease for 25 years. He believes the world is at a dangerous tipping…
ByIs HR the force holding back our economy?
ByThe former chancellor’s memoir Freedom reveals how her childhood in East Germany helped forge a doctrine of moral decency…
ByIn his memoir, Citizen, the former president struggles to understand why his brand of post-New Deal American liberalism has…
ByThe great neurologist offered a lesson in treating our fellow humans with care and true attention.
ByOver 24 novels, the bruised Louisiana detectives Robicheaux and Purcel have become one of crime writing’s great partnerships.
ByAlso featuring Collared: How We Made the Modern Dog by Chris Pearson and Untold Lessons by Maddalena Vaglio Tanet.
ByThe beauty of the composer’s piano trios is renewed in the hands of three virtuosos.
ByTwo exhibitions reveal how, for the great Renaissance artists, drawing was both a tool for making paintings and a…
ByRalph Fiennes gives an all-time best performance in this sumptuous, thrilling drama about appointing a new pope.
ByWatching the BBC’s The Making of Do They Know It’s Christmas?, what was once such a big deal dematerialised…
ByThis eight-part series reveals the council homes unfit for human habitation – in horrifying detail.
ByAnd the great ones can be as moving as music.
ByThe concentration required for me to fumble through Beethoven leaves no room in my brain for anything else, apart…
ByBut everything else is falling to bits.
ByThe pleasures of the game are everywhere, from its integration into the English language to Ally McCoist.
ByThis column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByPlease email zuzanna.lachendro@newstatesman.co.uk if you would like to be featured.
ByThe award-winning playwright on the nobility of teachers and the masterpiece that is The Sopranos.
By