Tech companies are building enormous data centres and reconfiguring energy infrastructure across the US, all to power the burgeoning AI industry. On a road trip, Maia Woluchem and Livia Garofalo trace ...
On a January evening last year, Diana*, a Honduran domestic worker in Rome was assaulted by a client at his home. An acquaintance from her parish had recommended the employer to Diana and she had been ...
Addis is a city at a crossroads. A massive redevelopment project is reshaping Ethiopia’s capital into what Prime Minister ...
In an increasingly hostile environment, activism and coalition-building across the region persists. As the US under Trump ...
An oil boom is reshaping Guyana’s future. Ben Jacob traces the country’s long history of colonial exploitation from Britain’s sugar factory to Exxon’s oil fields. Georgetown, the capital city of ...
We welcome story pitches for our website and print magazine: our articles range from features on under-reported topics and struggles in the fight for global justice, to punchy comment pieces and ...
Secretive and ruthless, the traffickers controlling the kidney trade thrive on the desperation of the poor and the sick. Nancy Scheper-Hughes lays bare the ‘collateral damage’. The slide on the screen ...
Beyond the sensationalist headlines, Obiora Ikoku finds a deeply rooted crisis, made worse by the country’s ruling elite. Nine months ago, Rita Gendaga was preparing for her late father’s funeral when ...
Anti-abortion campaigners have their sights set on Ethiopia – a progressive outlier in a region marred by restrictions. Who’s behind the emboldened ‘pro-life’ movement and what’s at stake for women’s ...
The worlds first hydrogen bomb, codenamed 'Mike'. Nuclear weapons testing conducted by the US at Bikini and Enewtak atolls in the Pacific Ocean during 1946-1958 exposed local people to radioactive ...
Israel is at the forefront of the booming spyware industry that threatens human rights, press freedom and democracy worldwide. An Israeli soldier puts her hand under a mini drone in Beersheba, a city ...
The mass starvation that killed three million Indians during the closing years of the Second World War was no act of nature; it was engineered. Britain must face up to this crime, says Jason Hickel.
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