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Correspondents
Correspondents
The island making everyone crazy
Nic Maclellan
24 September 2018
Nauru’s government tried to restrict journalists covering this month’s Pacific Islands Forum, but only highlighted the desperate state of refugees living on the island, and…
Correspondents
Nordic numbers
Mats Engström
20 September 2018
Sweden’s far-right party is big enough to cause headaches but small enough to be contained — with the right policies — by its larger rivals
Correspondents
Speakers great and small
Graeme Dobell
13 September 2018
Are America and Australia two allies separated by a common language?
Correspondents
British eyes on Canberra’s mess
David Hayes
27 August 2018
Letter from London
| Australia’s political drama gives Britain respite from Brexit, along with a crash course in Canberrology
Correspondents
“I am German when we win, but I am an immigrant when we lose”
Klaus Neumann
12 August 2018
Why did Mesut Özil, one of the most talented footballers of his generation, decide to quit playing for his home country?
Correspondents
“When we vote, we expect change”
Erin Handley & Kong Meta
30 July 2018
An inevitable election result in Cambodia has attracted international condemnation and resignation tinged with defiance among supporters of the opposition
Correspondents
Getting ready for the blue wave
Lesley Russell
28 July 2018
A frenetic White House reflects growing fears about the Republicans’ fate in November
Correspondents
A mad riddle, plus plus plus
David Hayes
27 July 2018
Britain’s exit from Europe is showing the flaws of both parties to the negotiations
Correspondents
Waving, but also drowning
Klaus Neumann
24 July 2018
The rising death toll in the Mediterranean reflects a deeper problem with European policy towards irregular migrants
Correspondents
The elephant in the bedroom
Jonathan Malloy
13 July 2018
Canadians find themselves caught in an uncomfortably close relationship with Donald Trump’s America
Correspondents
“Here we are, living it again, as though we didn’t learn our lesson”
Margaret Simons
4 July 2018
Profile
| Filipino senator Risa Hontiveros faces jail for protecting witnesses to a brutal state-sponsored killing. Has the country’s politics come full circle?
Correspondents
Ireland’s new body politics
David Hayes
22 June 2018
Ireland’s vote to legalise abortion is having a percussive impact on its neighbours
Correspondents
How citizens became aliens
David Hayes
29 May 2018
The British government’s torment of West Indians links two national fixations: immigration and Europe
Correspondents
Cambodia’s media conundrum
Erin Handley
16 May 2018
Did journalists who left the
Phnom Penh Post
after its sale this month make the right decision?
Correspondents
In Timor-Leste, a vote for certainty
Michael Leach
14 May 2018
A clear result and a strong showing by the opposition bode well for the country’s new parliament
Correspondents
Heated campaign draws to a close in Timor-Leste
Michael Leach
11 May 2018
East Timorese vote tomorrow in a second attempt to choose a viable government
Correspondents
Russia’s war on history
David Hayes
30 March 2018
How a poison attack in an English cathedral city became an international diplomatic crisis
Correspondents
In Myanmar, politics makes a comeback
Thomas Kean
29 March 2018
Parliament’s election of a new president this week creates the opportunity for a change in direction
Correspondents
In the shadow of Guantanamo Bay
Antonio Castillo
22 March 2018
Cuba’s namesake town sits uncomfortably close to the US military base
Correspondents
Trumped in Pennsylvania
Lesley Russell
19 March 2018
The Republican Party is heading for the midterm elections with no plan B
Correspondents
Is America’s gun debate different this time?
Lesley Russell
15 March 2018
As US gun-control efforts continue, there are signs of a shift in opinion and resolve
Correspondents
China’s big-city dreamers
Duncan Hewitt
30 January 2018
Urban life is still a fragile aspiration for millions of rural migrants
Correspondents
The Guardian goes for broke
David Hayes
10 January 2018
Britain’s liberal beacon is scaling down but thinking big
Correspondents
Iran: why it’s been different this time
R. Tousi
4 January 2018
The latest protests reveal rising discontent outside the major cities
Correspondents
Kazuo Ishiguro’s Nobel performance
David Hayes
12 December 2017
The novelist’s week in Stockholm was an experimental opening towards a new public voice
Correspondents
New Caledonia’s date with destiny
Nic Maclellan
11 December 2017
With a referendum on self-determination due in a year’s time, young Kanaks are debating their future
Correspondents
From cascade to citadel
David Hayes
6 December 2017
How the post-Weinstein furore shook British politics
Correspondents
No power, but plenty of symbolism
Norman Abjorensen
22 November 2017
A Marcos-era project has caught the imagination of Philippine politicians who favour a return to authoritarian rule — despite its failure to produce a single watt of saleable…
Correspondents
Duterte opens up a new front
Norman Abjorensen
10 November 2017
Letter from Manila
| Even the highest reaches of the law might not be immune to Rodrigo Duterte’s assault on accountability
Correspondents
Kazuo Ishiguro: a sense of freedom
David Hayes
10 October 2017
Letter from London
| A Nobel award gives the British novelist’s voice as well as his work a new authority
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