All regions
This page lists content from all regions. You can browse more easily by visiting the specific region pages using the menu above (or the links below).
Let the light in
Carole Concha Bell on how projectionists have been censored for criticizing the Chilean government’s pandemic response.
In Brazil, conspiracies are for professionals
QAnon has a lot to learn from Brazil, writes Leonardo Sakamoto.
‘I was ready to do whatever it took to bring peace’
Death threats delivered by bleeding amputees were not enough to deter Betty Bigombe from trying to make peace between Joseph Kony’s notorious Lord’s Resistance Army and the Ugandan government of Yoweri Museveni.
Kids locked up
Amy Hall speaks to the campaigners leading the call against childhood incarceration of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people.
Country profile: Palestine
Curfews, routine raids and land-grabs. Zoe Holman on what has become of the fragmented Occupied Palestinian Territories’ struggle for statehood since the 1993 Oslo agreement.
To fight Covid-19, Africa must reclaim its economic sovereignty
A global coalition of economists calls for a radical shift in Africa’s economic policy, one rooted in sovereignty and sustainability.
‘Young people in our country need care and support to thrive’
Flavia Mutamutega, Rwanda’s sole agony aunt for adolescent girls, tells Veronique Mistiaen about the problems that preoccupy them.
Introducing...Lazarus Chakwera
Richard Swift on the theologian-president promising to stamp out nepotism and corruption in Malawian politics.
Defending Rojava
As Turkey continues its assaults on Kurdish regions, the international campaign RiseUp4Rojava issues a call for solidarity in defence of the social revolution in North-East Syria.
Why Indian outrage over Black Lives Matter rings hollow
Anti-blackness is still a galvanizing force in India, writes Nilanjana Bhowmick.
Hall of infamy: Iván Duque Márquez
Colombian technocrat Iván Duque Márquez is not exactly a fan of peace.
On the pink corridor
How trans women in Honduras are helping their imprisoned sisters. Frauke Decoodt reports from Tegucigalpa.
In times of Covid-19, black people die twice in Brazil
Leonardo Sakamoto reflects on the police killing of João Pedro Matos Pinto, a 14-year-old black boy, and one of many Brazilian George Floyds.
Boat migration 'push-back' will never be the asylum solution
Barney Cullum speaks to the young survivors of Somali terrorist cells and sectarian violence who are feeling the brunt of Greece’s new ‘push-back’ policies.
Algeria’s uprising: ‘The people want independence!’
The Covid-19 pandemic may have put Algeria’s revolutionary uprising temporarily on hold, but, as Hamza Hamouchene observes, the will to topple the military regime remains strong.
Hall of infamy: Aung San Suu Kyi
Aung San Suu Kyi’s spectacular fall from human rights icon to genocide denier.
‘I’ll paint all the ways South Sudan has suffered’
South Sudan’s James Aguer Garang talks to Jan-Peter Westad about art, trauma and healing.
The interview: Sarojini Nadimpally
Fresh from organizing deliveries of PPE to frontline workers, social scientist Sarojini Nadimpally speaks to Amy Hall about women’s health, the Covid-19 crisis and the inequalities it has exacerbated.
After Isis
Most European countries refuse to repatriate the thousands of former ISIS foreign fighters and their families now held in Kurdish camps in Syria., but Kosovo is bringing its citizens home. Sara Manisera reports.
Battle of the heavyweights
Jan Goodey reports on the legal bid to save the Amazon fringe that could set a worldwide precedent for forest protection.
100 years of hope, struggle and betrayal
The Kurdish quest for freedom and independence has been long, dramatic and complicated. Here’s a potted history of the past century.
Dreaming of Sur
Five years after bombarding the historic neighbourhood of Sur, the Turkish state still wants to keep Kurdish residents out. But it cannot stop people dreaming, hoping, resisting.
Ways of belonging
Having travelled to the land of her birth as the coronavirus pandemic began to gather pace, Yewande Omotoso feels the tug of home.
Criminalizing hunger
In Chile, state security forces are increasingly detaining, beating and harassing the volunteers of community-led soup kitchens. Carole Concha Bell speaks to the organizers resisting this intimidation.
Abandoning the rural poor
The deadly neglect of India’s rural communities must end, writes Nilanjana Bhowmick.
Turkey ramps up war on Kurds in Northern Iraq
Turkish airstrikes in Northern Iraq are nothing new, but the recent co-ordinated air and ground assault is unprecedented, writes John Lubbuck.
Mandela of the Middle East?
How did a once hardcore Marxist-Leninist and nationalist guerrilla leader come to develop a politics of participatory democracy, feminism and ecology? Vanessa Baird traces Abdullah Öcalan’s journey.
It’s time for sanctions
Israel can’t be allowed to continue its colonization of Palestinian lands, writes Ben Jamal of the Palestine Solidarity Campaign.
First Ebola, then Covid-19
Four years ago, New Internationalist travelled to West Africa to hear the stories of communities in recovery from the deadly Ebola epidemic. Hazel Healy gets back in touch.