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Showing 31 - 60 of 71 results for:
andy%20butfoy
Books & Arts
Unholy night
Jane Goodall
27 October 2021
Billed as a horror story,
Midnight Mass
audaciously explores an isolated community
Essays & Reportage
How Xi’s crackdown became a backlash
Richard McGregor
1 October 2019
The Chinese president is finally meeting resistance, not least among disgruntled officials
International
Biden and the bomb
Andy Butfoy
1 February 2021
A modified version of the old normal might be the best the new president can deliver
National Affairs
Pell’s judges
Jeremy Gans
3 June 2019
This week’s Court of Appeal hearing won’t necessarily be the last word
Books & Arts
Looking at music
Andrew Ford
10 August 2011
Increasingly people are watching rather than simply listening to recorded music, writes
Andrew Ford
Essays & Reportage
Australia’s great urban experiment
Diana Bagnall
14 March 2019
When is an airport not just an airport? Western Sydneysiders are in the process of finding out
National Affairs
Are the IMF’s forecasts too pessimistic?
John Quiggin
20 April 2020
With the right policies, the IMF’s recovery can happen with less pain than forecast
Correspondents
Rishi redux
Michael Jacobs
26 October 2022
Does Britain’s youngest prime minister for more than 200 years have what it takes to end the country’s crisis of leadership?
Books & Arts
The rise and rise of Narendra Modi
Robin Jeffrey
10 June 2015
Books
| What happens when a party of true believers led by a ferociously motivated politician takes on a dying government?
Robin Jeffrey
charts an enigmatic…
Books & Arts
The youngish one
Richard Johnstone
6 March 2013
Richard Johnstone
reviews Doris Lessing’s
The Good Terrorist
International
On trial for hacking: the story so far
Rodney Tiffen
13 February 2014
It’s now the defence’s turn to put its case in the News International phone-hacking trial in London.
Rodney Tiffen
untangles the testimony to date
National Affairs
This time it’s serious
Jock Given
16 July 2009
Digital TV is already here, and it means Roger Federer might be replaced by blank screens in Mildura’s analogue households next year, writes
Jock Given
Correspondents
Britain’s compromise revolution
David Hayes
27 May 2010
Britain’s voters have forced a two-party system to begin to operate by a three-party logic. And it’s about to get even more interesting, writes
David Hayes
Books & Arts
Your Christmas present problems solved
Andrew Ford
10 December 2014
Andrew Ford
’s pick of 2014 album releases
Essays & Reportage
Computer says no
Ellen Broad
29 April 2019
The hazards of being a woman in technology
International
China in the Pacific: a question of influence
Graeme Smith
16 October 2017
Exaggerated fears about China’s intentions reflect a misunderstanding of what’s happening in the region
Correspondents
England on trial
David Hayes
16 August 2011
Four days and nights of riotous disorder are a potent argument for social repair. But lack of agreement on fundamentals could soon prove fatal to the chances, says
David Hayes
Books & Arts
The year of living anxiously
Graeme Davison
26 June 2018
Phillipa McGuinness chronicles a year when time sped up
Books & Arts
Fletch, Muscles and the Rocket
Jock Given
26 February 2013
Books
| Three players, three hard slogs.
Jock Given
on the golden age of Australian tennis
International
Science under siege
Lesley Russell
5 October 2018
Donald Trump has launched an all-fronts attack on science and environmental protection
National Affairs
Will Labor need to share power in Victoria?
Tim Colebatch
24 November 2022
Polls have inevitably tightened in Victoria, and the shape of the upper house continues to be anyone’s bet
Books & Arts
How the AFR’s “disastrous” paywall delivered the goods
Michael Gill
7 November 2011
Former Financial Review Group CEO
Michael Gill
responds to our podcast, Paywalls: the good news and the gamble
Correspondents
Corbyn and responsibility
David Hayes
8 October 2018
This party leader can’t own or disown his past, nor Labour’s
International
From scandal to reform: Leveson’s way forward
Rodney Tiffen
6 December 2012
The Leveson report's case for more rigorous press accountability was immediately undercut by David Cameron, but despite the cheers from the tabloids, the prime minister has backed…
Books & Arts
Inside Cambridge Analytica
Jane Goodall
19 April 2018
Television
| Behind the algorithms, is this just an old-fashioned propaganda outfit with a thick veneer of spin?
National Affairs
Underestimating China
Tim Colebatch
7 June 2018
Let’s clear up any confusion about the size of the Chinese economy
International
China’s ghosts
Hamish McDonald
5 March 2019
A series of anniversaries is making the leadership anxious and exposing the country’s weaknesses
National Affairs
For today, a triumph for Victorian Labor
Tim Colebatch
27 November 2022
Dan Andrews’s government has cause for celebration — and plenty on its plate
Correspondents
After the Corbyn cult
David Hayes
14 September 2015
British Labour has chosen its most left-wing leader ever, writes
David Hayes
in London. The lessons for democracy are profound
Correspondents
David Cameron: destiny deferred
David Hayes
24 October 2015
Britain’s prime minister is a proven winner at the polls. Now he faces an even bigger test, says
David Hayes
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