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Showing 1 - 30 of 71 results for:
andy%20butfoy
Essays & Reportage
News Corp and the hackers: a scandal in two parts
Rodney Tiffen
15 September 2011
With the Leveson inquiry into the British press starting work in London,
Rodney Tiffen
looks at what the phone-hacking scandal has revealed so far about media, politics…
Correspondents
British Labour, a leap in the dark
David Hayes
12 July 2015
After five years in a bunker a wounded party faces a choice of exits, says
David Hayes
International
Obama versus the Pentagon
Andy Butfoy
25 September 2009
The cold war still hangs over efforts to reduce the world’s nuclear arsenal, writes
Andy Butfoy
National Affairs
Nuclear disarmament: nine steps to a revolution
Andy Butfoy
8 April 2010
The world has nine more steps to take if we’re serious about nuclear disarmament, writes
Andy Butfoy
International
Adjusting to change
Andy Butfoy
17 April 2009
Don’t expect a revolution in US foreign policy, writes
Andy Butfoy
National Affairs
How Labor finished Bush’s uranium script
Andy Butfoy
23 November 2011
The debate over uranium exports to India has ignored the most important argument of all, writes
Andy Butfoy
International
Imbalance of power
Andy Butfoy
5 April 2013
Despite the cuts, the United States will remain the world’s military giant for the foreseeable future, writes
Andy Butfoy
Correspondents
The Digger and the dirt
Frank Bongiorno
2 February 2011
The next casualties of Britain’s phone-hacking controversy could come from the media, politics or the police. But whoever falls next, it probably won’t be good news…
International
“Offensive, defensive, everything”
Andy Butfoy
9 March 2017
Character and content can be hard to disentangle in assessing Donald Trump’s international security policies
International
Obama’s nuclear legacy
Andy Butfoy
28 November 2016
Has Donald Trump been handed a large, up-to-date arsenal?
Essays & Reportage
Drug companies take a dip
Xan Rice
14 July 2010
When GlaxoSmithKline announced a series of initiatives to improve access to drugs in least-developed countries, its most radical proposal was for a “patent pool” to…
Books & Arts
Reconciling rights and sovereignty
Klaus Neumann
19 July 2012
Andy Lamey’s book,
Frontier Justice
, would make useful reading for the prime minister’s expert panel on asylum seekers, writes
Klaus Neumann
International
Doomsday postponed
Andy Butfoy
13 March 2020
Did a fifty-year-old treaty really increase the possibility of nuclear war?
Correspondents
The year the gloves came off
Duncan Hewitt
25 September 2018
Updated
| Despite opting for a less confrontational chief executive, Beijing has tightened its grip in Hong Kong
Books & Arts
Stage crafter
Jane Goodall
13 January 2016
Performance
| David Bowie brought extraordinary inventiveness and highly developed technique to the auditorium, writes
Jane Goodall
International
Missile envy
Andy Butfoy
6 February 2019
Donald Trump and Vladimir Putin seem set on undoing the historic achievement of their 1980s predecessors
Correspondents
Welcome to the world
Morag Fraser
30 September 2009
Barack Obama made a strategic choice by hosting the G20 in a resurgent Pittsburgh.
Morag Fraser
visits a city in transition
International
From Korea to Kabul, and beyond
Andy Butfoy
23 August 2021
If the past is any guide, failure in Afghanistan won’t end Washington’s military activism
International
President Trump’s button
Andy Butfoy
5 February 2018
What does the latest
Nuclear Posture Review
tell us about America’s likely actions?
Correspondents
Labour’s leadership marathon reaches Manchester
Frank Bongiorno
11 August 2010
In Australia, Julia Gillard replaced Kevin Rudd almost overnight. In Britain, the leadership transition is taking quite a lot longer
International
Rupert Murdoch’s Annus Horribilis
Rodney Tiffen
10 July 2012
It’s a year since News Corporation’s cover-up of phone-hacking in Britain began to unravel.
Rodney Tiffen
takes stock of the damage so far, assesses the News…
Books & Arts
Leaning back
Sophie Black
10 November 2015
Books
| What is valuable? What is important? What is right? What is natural? Anne-Marie Slaughter takes on the big issues confronting working women and men, writes
Sophie Black
Essays & Reportage
Big promises from Big Pharma
Qudsiya Karrim
9 January 2010
GlaxoSmithKline created waves last year with a promise of cheaper drugs and patent waivers in developing countries. In this special report
Qudsiya Karrim
in Johannesburg…
Books & Arts
On quitting
Jock Given
5 September 2022
Does bowing out involve a kind of “self-discipline normally associated with persistence”?
Books & Arts
Looking at ourselves in Pompeii’s mirror
Frank Sear
18 June 2013
A new book explores our fascination with Pompeii and looks at the way artists have used the town, writes
Frank Sear
Books & Arts
Steering blithely towards the rocks
Judith Brett
18 February 2010
Fintan O’Toole’s gripping account of the fall of the Celtic Tiger
International
Not the new cold war
Graeme Dobell
27 November 2018
“Hot peace” is a much better label for this period of competing powers within a single system
International
Delicately dancing Democrats
Lesley Russell
8 December 2023
Looking ahead to 2028 but with half an eye on 2024, presidential hopefuls are positioning themselves for a run
Books & Arts
Count to five and twenty
Ellie Rennie
24 June 2010
TV |
Little Dorrit
, a vivid tale for the times, works backwards from impact to cause, writes
Ellie Rennie
National Affairs
Panopticon in your pocket
Michael Bartos
27 April 2020
The government releases its COVIDSafe app, and research continues around the globe
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