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National affairs
Essays & reportage
Books & arts
International
Correspondents
Essays & reportage
People-watching in Port Moresby
Gordon Peake
14 September 2024
Our correspondent reacquaints himself with the PNG capital, a place getting a lot more attention these days
Views from elsewhere
Ronald Reagan didn’t win the cold war
Max Boot
13 September 2024
Myths about the collapse of the Soviet Union are encouraging mistaken policies towards China
Essays & reportage
Gaza at The Hague
Sophie Rigney
13 September 2024
What the International Court of Justice says about Israel’s treatment of the occupied territories and what it means for Australia
Books & arts
Fitzroy’s young junkologists
Ian McShane
13 September 2024
The rise and fall of an experiment in self-directed learning
Books & arts
War of the worlds
Hamish McDonald
12 September 2024
Silk Road sceptic William Dalrymple argues for the centrality of India in ancient times
Books & arts
Tomorrow’s women
Barbara Keys
10 September 2024
How ten Australian women made lives in the country that epitomised modernity
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National affairs
National affairs
Increasing JobSeeker is good economics
Adam Triggs
3 September 2024
The arguments against a rise in JobSeeker have proliferated, but none of them stands up to scrutiny
National affairs
No longer fit for purpose
Paddy Gourley
30 August 2024
It’s time for a reborn immigration department outside Canberra’s bulging home affairs portfolio
National affairs
The ASX’s CHESS checkmate
Helen Bird
29 August 2024
ASIC has accused Australia’s dominant stock exchange operator of false and misleading conduct. But does the ASX have a deeper problem?
National affairs
Peter Dutton’s road to nowhere
Peter Brent
28 August 2024
The opposition leader has an electorally ineffective obsession
National affairs
Slippery slopes
Chris Bonnor
26 August 2024
NAPLAN’s scorecard has been back in the news, but could those test results be hiding a more important failure?
Essays & reportage
Essays & reportage
Is grown-up government enough?
Paul Strangio
3 September 2024
The puzzle of Anthony Albanese’s struggling prime ministership
Essays & reportage
The best kind of troublemaker
Catherine Kevin
16 August 2024
Historian Judith Allen challenged the way historians do their work
Essays & reportage
Angels and demons
Mark Baker
8 August 2024
The military hierarchy took a dim view of aircrew traumatised by their experiences over Nazi Germany
Essays & reportage
Parliament makes history
Frank Bongiorno & Joshua Black
6 August 2024
Following a heated double-dissolution election, both houses met jointly for the first time ever on 6–7 August 1974
Essays & reportage
“The election that never was”
Jenny Hocking and Allison Cadzow
5 August 2024
Gough Whitlam’s 1974 gamble on a double dissolution election paid off for key legislation
Books & arts
Books & arts
Unhealthy ambitions
Mark Edele
12 September 2024
A fine-grained and often funny new history of the Soviet cold war reveals an imperial power promoting itself as a friend of the global liberation struggle
Books & arts
“That’s all I can do”
Andrew Ford
10 September 2024
Composer Alexander Goehr swam against the postwar tide
Books & arts
Is it all going to happen again?
Peter Marks
10 September 2024
Dennis Glover turns to twentieth-century history in his call to arms against authoritarian populism
Books & arts
Down the rabbit hole
Jane Goodall
9 September 2024
Drawing on experiences of personal threat, three women probe the world of online conspiracies
Books & arts
Speak, memory
Nick Haslam
5 September 2024
Gideon Haigh explores a “submerged continent”
International
International
Fractured consensus
Tony Walker
2 September 2024
As Israeli protesters take to the streets, news emerges that defence minister Yoav Gallant has clashed again with Benjamin Netanyahu
International
Lords of the wasteland
Hamish McDonald
30 August 2024
A military analyst and an economist see Myanmar’s junta heading towards a desperate fight for survival
International
In Bangladesh, a Nobel laureate’s final act
Thomas Kean
21 August 2024
The rebellion that put Muhammad Yunus at the helm should prompt reflection in Canberra and other foreign capitals
International
And now what do we do?
Hamish McDonald
15 August 2024
Le Parisien
’s headline captures the post-Olympic challenges facing France’s new left-dominated government, not least in New Caledonia
International
Midwestern Walz
Tony Walker
7 August 2024
What can the exuberant Minnesota governor expect if he successfully partners Kamala Harris to the White House?
Correspondents
Correspondents
Kamala Harris is good at this
Bill Scher
12 September 2024
The vice-president laid out her plans for the future while Donald Trump was caught in a tangle of past grievances
Correspondents
November’s coat-tailers and ticket-splitters
Lesley Russell
27 August 2024
While Harris and Walz capture the headlines, congressional seats are being closely fought in key states
Correspondents
Kamala Harris redraws the political lines
Bill Scher
24 August 2024
In her acceptance speech, the Democratic nominee sought to flip the script on patriotism, inflation and immigration
Correspondents
Are American men ready for Kamala Harris?
Bill Scher
16 August 2024
Some polls suggest the Democratic nominee can hold her own among male voters despite Donald Trump’s misogynistic attacks
Correspondents
Treating the body politic
Lesley Russell
13 August 2024
Much is at stake for health and healthcare in the US election