In this issue
Indigenous people living in Peru’s Manu National Park have been locked out of its management. Could change be on the horizon? asks Jack Lo Lau.
Conservationists in the Global South are seeking sustainable pathways, finds Graeme Green.
An interview with environmental activist Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim.
As the alarm sounds on the sixth mass extinction, Dinyar Godrej squares up to what we need to do to avert it.
Massive foreign debts and an impoverished population are intensifying age-old conflicts over natural resources in this multicultural nation, writes Amy Booth.
When alcohol causes so much damage is it unethical to set up a brewery? Our Agony Uncle responds.
Danny Dorling and Annika Koljonen explain how Finland has come to be so equal, peaceful and happy – and sketch out the lessons we might learn from its example.
Malcolm Lewis on the latest releases in parallel cinema: The Mole Agent (El agente topo), directed and written by Maite Alberdi; African Apocalypse, directed and co-written by Rob Lemkin.
Louise Gray turns her attention to the anti-slavery musical activism of Tse Tse Fly Middle East.
ILYA sets ‘Apolitical Intellectuals’ to a modern tune, as he remembers the life of the Guatemalan revolutionary poet.
The families of the disappeared are not giving up their search until they have answers. Jan-Peter Westad reports.
Tesfa-Alem Tekle showcases the unique agroforestry system that sustains communities in Ethiopia’s southern highlands.
Rob Wallace connects industrialized farming to the emergence of ever more deadly pathogens.
It might reverse the UN’s order of holiness, Vanessa Baird finds.
Liam Taylor on the popstar politician taking on a ‘horrifying’ election battle in Uganda.
Danny Chivers reveals the deep flaws of ‘net-zero’ targets.
Does a racially just future need to include reparations for transatlantic slavery or is that a distraction from achieving equality for future generations? KA Dilday and Kehinde Andrews disagree on this topical issue.
After months of unconstitutional rule since Jeanine Áñez’s military-backed coup, Richard Swift gives a rundown of the low-profile socialist recently elected to Bolivia’s highest office.
Chin’ono’s crime was using Twitter to criticize Zimbabwe’s government, writes Nanjala Nyabola.
Nilanjana Bhowmick on the recent legislation steamrolled through parliament that has disadvantaged working people and gripped India’s farmers in protest.
Bolsonaro’s desperate pledges to Trumpism have not paid off, argues Leonardo Sakamoto.