US foreign policy continues to subjugate the nation’s youth, Daniel Khalili-Tari writes.
Violeta Santos Moura reports from Poland, where reliance on coal kills some 45,000 people each year.
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.
Wayne Ellwood looks at the scale of China’s ’Belt and Road’ juggernaut and its economic and political ramifications.
In the Barcelona area, local governments and citizens are transforming municipal politics, finds Luke Stobart.
Lavinia Steinfort on the insidious 'investor protection mechanisms' stacking the odds in favour of corporations.
Ian Neubauer reports from Bougainville, where rebels chased away a mining company 30 years ago. Now the company is planning its return.
Communities across the world taking back control of services and resources.
Spanning hopeless romanticism to utter contempt, Harrison Jones takes an in-depth look at memories of France’s last mass uprising.
After decades of neglect, the mood is turning. Dinyar Godrej on the fightback against privatization.
Has Putin exported ‘managed democracy’ to Hungary? Madeline Roache examines Orbán’s regime.
A group of NGOs is ramping up efforts to protect some of Europe’s last pristine rivers.
A global social movement is rising. It is open, participatory and public, writes Jamie Kelsey-Fry.
The Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND) was founded 60 years ago.
For those in government-held cities, only fragments of normality remain. Sally Hayden writes.
Immigration Removal Centres are the shame of Britain, Katie McQue reports.
Nick Dowson speaks with the indigenous lawyer and campaigner fighting a gas pipeline in Mexico.
Amy Hall on the global fight for black liberation.