Successive Georgian presidents have attracted much-needed foreign aid and investment by acting as enthusiastic handmaidens to neoliberal…
With their dreams of competing at the Paris Paralympics shattered, the Gaza Sunbirds have pivoted to a full blown aid operation.
Why are women voting for a party whose leaders have paid mere lip service to gender equality? Nilanjana Bhowmick offers…
Bethany Rielly reports from War on Want’s festival of resistance.
Indonesia has not ratified the Genocide Convention, putting its history and candidates in the spotlight.
Rosebell Kagumire explores why Global Majority thinkers and activists have been unafraid to show solidarity with Palestine.
Conrad Landin speaks to Saga and Ahmed, two young Palestinians who have recently settled in Scotland.
Danny Chivers reports on how the people of Ecuador voted against the oil giants and for the Yasuní National Park.
From school strikes to assembly boycotts, Lydia Noon reports on how children are calling for a ceasefire in Gaza.
As New Internationalist celebrates its 50th anniversary, Vanessa Baird looks back over five decades of campaigning journalism and inspiration.
As mass protests erupt worldwide over Israel’s brutal assault on Gaza, Andrew Feinstein asks if Benjamin Netanyahu has pushed his allies too far.
Ahead of a royal visit, communities violently evicted by colonial era settlers are calling for justice. Anthony Langat reports.
How far are states willing to go to spy on dissent? Bethany Rielly reports from Catalonia to find out.
Antony Loewenstein examines spyware’s role in Israel’s occupation of Palestine, and why governments are failing to reign in its insidious spread.
Sending a message from inside Gaza, Palestinian journalist and activist Ahmed Abu Artema calls for global protests to prevent a repeat of history.
Priya Lukka explains what reparations could mean, drawing from the rich and varied global movement for repair.
Karin Goodwin reports from Vancouver on how reconnecting with their Indigenous culture is helping women heal.
Stephanie Boyd reports from an Amazonian village where traditional ways of life are changing with modern times.
An autocrat in institutional clothing, the Tunisian president has crushed the hopes of democrats in the birthplace of the Arab Spring.
A new Kenyan media initiative is using live performance to break free of colonial industry norms, Patrick Gathara reports.
Can the quest for peace in Europe bring calm at home? Rosebell Kagumire asks.
A new report shows the dramatic rise in cash earnings of shareholders in Britain’s big oil since the Paris Agreement.
Musawenkosi Cabe speaks to activists who were part of the Rhodes Must Fall push to decolonize universities and challenge white supremacy.
Museums and colonialism are inextricably linked. Julio Etchart explores how projects in colonizing countries are wrestling with how to address that past.