If we all became vegan tomorrow
The Guardian repeats the myth that becoming vegan is the ‘single biggest way’ to reduce your impact on Earth. Chris Saltmarsh and Harpreet Kaur Paul disagree.
Killer robots: the race for Autonomous Weapons
Noel Sharkey’s stark warning against the latest arms race.
COP24: Who are these UN climate meetings for?
Nick Dowson highlights the issues up for debate, obstacles to negotiations and where all this leaves the majority world.
Ours not to reason why?
When the body bags reach the relatives, the biggest question remains, ‘Why?’ Mari Marcel Thekaekara writes about the senselessness of war.
Tackling Canada’s opioid crisis
Karin Goodwin reports from Vancouver on how reconnecting with their Indigenous culture is helping women heal.
Fiji: really a tropical island paradise?
Inclusive rhetoric by Fiji’s PM is belied by police repression, reports Wame Valentine.
Settlers displace West Bank Bedouins amid Israel’s Gaza attack
Under the cover of Israel’s attack on Gaza, armed settlers and soldiers are erasing entire Bedouin villages in the West Bank. Tom Anderson reports.
Palestine, 100 years after Balfour
Paul Kelemen and Dick Pitt look at the British government’s role in Israel’s formation.
Kerala rises above the floods
This Indian state's current struggle sets a good example for the rest of the country, writes Mari Marcel Thekaekara.
How to fight illegal fishing
Can fishers, coastguards and marine activists see off the thieves from powerful nations plundering the seas of West Africa? Aïda Grovestins reports.
G7 resistance: Harnessing collective power
As the international summit begins in Cornwall, Amy Hall speaks to people showing up to challenge its powerful leaders.
Theresa May rolls out the red carpet for Saudi crown prince
Only six per cent of Britons back selling arms to Saudi Arabia. So why has Mohamed bin Salman been invited to Britain? Vanessa Baird asks.
Five things you need to know about the Glasgow Climate Pact
Following the Glasgow Climate Pact, the goal of limiting global warming to 1.5°C above pre-industrial levels still has a pulse, argue Simon Lewis and Mark Maslin – but only just.
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.
Will cows and temples still deliver a mandate for Modi?
Nilanjana Bhowmick weighs up Modi's chances in the coming elections in India.
No place for children
Not even young lives have been spared by the junta. Maung Moe reports on a day of shame.
‘Why are you killing us?’
Is the war in Ukraine reaching a stalemate and is Russia showing signs of taking a step back? Having recently returned from the country, Francesca Ebel explores how Russia’s invasion has progressed over the past few weeks.
Just transition – now or never
As Egypt prepares to host the latest UN climate conference, COP27, Hamza Hamouchene and Katie Sandwell call time on ‘business as usual’, which in North Africa means non-solutions that line private pockets at public expense and protect…
‘This factory was killing our brothers and sisters in Palestine, we had to do something’
Bethany Rielly speaks to the campaigners who risked jail time to drive weapons manufacturer, Elbit Systems, out of their town.
Who do you save?
Syrian artist Amel al-Zakout nearly drowned in the Mediterranean Sea after her boat capsized en route to Greece. Volunteer lifeguard Gerard Canals was part of the rescue operation. Hazel Healy…
What does institutional justice look like?
Lola Olufemi examines what institutional justice means after the Avital Ronell controversy.