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National affairs
Essays & reportage
Books & arts
International
Correspondents
Correspondents
First casualty?
Jonathan Malloy
6 January 2025
Donald Trump’s trade threat has brought to a head the unrest within Justin Trudeau’s government
Books & arts
Chronicle of a catastrophe foretold
Klaus Neumann
24 December 2024
Could a close look at Austria tell us where Western democracies are heading?
Essays & reportage
Pursuing the wild reciter
Peter Kirkpatrick
23 December 2024
Whatever happened to the communal enjoyment of poetry?
National affairs
Chequered flags
Jock Given
19 December 2024
The arc of the moral universe might bend towards justice but sometimes it twists along the way
Essays & reportage
Beyond words
Iain Topliss
18 December 2024
Whether comical or conceptual, political or geographic, Saul Steinberg’s drawings extend the viewer’s horizons
International
Dronesplaining
Jane Goodall
19 December 2024
Whatever’s going on in the American skies, the action on the ground is worth exploring
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National affairs
National affairs
The year of governing precariously
Peter Browne
16 December 2024
2024’s casualties among governments across the globe throw fresh light on the US result
National affairs
A long goodbye?
Peter Brent
12 December 2024
The signs aren’t great for Labor, but the Coalition has its vulnerabilities too — and the election is still months away
National affairs
Who belongs in the Senate?
William Maley
6 December 2024
Pauline Hanson is wrong and Fatima Payman right about the question of eligibility
National affairs
Is that a fact?
Peter Browne
29 November 2024
Do partisan voters really inhabit separate realities?
National affairs
At last, Labor’s campaign finance bill
Graeme Orr
19 November 2024
Big parties versus the rest? Our assessment of the government’s plans
Essays & reportage
Essays & reportage
The fall of the meritocracy?
Dean Ashenden
10 December 2024
A taken-for-granted is being questioned at last, with implications in education and elsewhere
Essays & reportage
Zealots of the reading room
Anne-Marie Condé
6 December 2024
Great Australians
brought freshly researched history by fine writers and historians to a generation of Australians
Essays & reportage
The flickering cryosphere
Alessandro Antonello
6 December 2024
A centennial re-watching of the cinema of ice
Essays & reportage
What the West forgot about democracy
Erica Benner
29 November 2024
Outsiders promoting political liberalisation in an impatient or immodest spirit shouldn’t be surprised by a backlash
Essays & reportage
Barry Cohen’s “mistake” turns forty
Ray Edmondson
29 November 2024
How the battle for a National Film and Sound Archive came to a head
Books & arts
Books & arts
Colliding visions of government
Glyn Davis
17 December 2024
Vivek Ramaswamy and Elon Musk want to drastically cut government jobs. Dan Honig makes the case for better not fewer
Books & arts
Map-making and myth-busting
Zora Simic
14 December 2024
Joni Mitchell’s latest biographer creates a new geography of her work and influence
Books & arts
The good fight
Gary Werskey
11 December 2024
How two political consultants pushed the Democratic Party towards their imagined middle ground
Books & arts
Does Xi’s ideology matter?
John Fitzgerald
11 December 2024
Kevin Rudd sees a clear line between the Chinese president’s worldview and his country’s path. But is it as simple as that?
Books & arts
Things that want to be heard
Andrew Ford
9 December 2024
Musicologist Lawrence Kramer wants his readers to think differently about the sound of music and the music of sound
International
International
L’état, c’est moi!
Brett Evans
18 December 2024
A new documentary featuring leaked interrogation footage shows Israel’s PM under pressure
International
The fall of the house of Assad
Ross Burns
14 December 2024
A former Damascus-based diplomat watched from afar Syria’s long fight to shake off a brutal dynasty
International
Russia’s failed Syrian bluff
Mark Edele
11 December 2024
Is Vladimir Putin’s global strategy about to collapse under its own weight?
International
Labor goes one way, Israel the other
Tony Walker
6 December 2024
Australia’s vote on Gaza this week highlights a decades-long shift in the major parties’ attitudes towards Israel
International
One country, one system
Mark Baker
22 November 2024
Once again Britain stands by while China breaches the two countries’ agreement on Hong Kong
Correspondents
Correspondents
You can’t negotiate on an empty stomach
Nic Maclellan
6 December 2024
A government collapses in Paris, and the shockwaves extend as far as Nouméa
Correspondents
The Keir Starmer conundrum
David Hayes
25 November 2024
British Labour’s early missteps are sullying its promise of renewal. The prime minister, unmoved, is reaching for the stars
Correspondents
Neither triumph nor Trumped
Michael Jacobs
25 November 2024
Another cliffhanger climate conference achieves a kind of progress
Correspondents
Who governs the climate?
Michael Jacobs
21 November 2024
While COP29 meets in Baku G20 leaders have been making their own decisions in Rio
Correspondents
“Better a bad deal than a good civil war”
Nic Maclellan
15 November 2024
France has delayed elections in New Caledonia to enable negotiations on a new political statute. But what happens if a deal can’t be struck?