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Latest updated at: 2025-12-11T23:18:47.993+08:00
View Stat
1.
Why do so many Chinese still smoke?
2.
Hedging against Trump, Canada reconsiders ties with China
3.
José Antonio Kast is Chile’s probable next president. How will he govern?
4.
All hail “The President of Peace”
5.
How much does America know about its boat-strike targets?
6.
American doctors are rich and miserable
7.
Britain’s pitiful Christmas bonuses
8.
Pro-growth sports fans are getting organised in Britain
9.
Vietnam’s EV champion is bleeding cash
10.
A short guide to every business-hotel room
11.
Frank Gehry shook up buildings as never before
12.
Inside the fight for MAGA’s foreign policy
13.
Australia’s hard right is resurgent
14.
Nigeria’s kidnapping crisis
15.
Donald Trump has not ended conflict between Congo and Rwanda
16.
A window of opportunity for reform in Lebanon is closing
17.
Israel refuses to withdraw from Syria
18.
Talks stall between Turkey’s government and the Kurds
19.
Ukraine struggles to cope with America’s destructive peace plans
20.
Albania is trying to charm its way into the EU
21.
Ukraine’s trains, the country’s lifeline, have money problems
22.
More reasons for America’s friends to plan for the worst
23.
The battle for Warner Bros is a prelude to the real streaming war
24.
2025-12-11 The World this Week - Politics
25.
2025-12-11 The World this Week - Business
26.
2025-12-11 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
27.
Oracle and the hard truths about software
28.
America’s Supreme Court should strike down Donald Trump’s tariffs
29.
Germany has a lawyer problem
30.
What a stiff drink says about China’s economy
31.
America’s bond market is quiet—almost too quiet
32.
Wall Street is drooling over bank mergers
33.
Can anyone stop Europe’s populist right?
34.
The populists of Reform UK, already topping the polls, may climb higher
35.
Once a pariah, the National Rally is now France’s most popular party
36.
The Alternative for Germany is the leading party in some German polls
37.
How did one airline bring Indian aviation to its knees?
38.
Why many Asian megacities are miserable places
39.
Don’t fear China’s trillion-dollar trade surplus
40.
Russia is not as resilient as it wants you to think
41.
From social media to porn, age checks are spreading across the web
42.
The meaning of China’s record-high trade surplus
43.
Asia’s inexpensive AI stocks should worry American investors
44.
Britain’s troubled Ajax armoured-vehicle programme may be doomed
45.
The next version of the web will be built for machines, not humans
46.
Humans were lighting fires from scratch a lot earlier than previously thought
47.
Nigel Farage’s Reform UK has moderated in office
48.
How the “Donroe Doctrine” is changing Puerto Rico
49.
The Supreme Court is handing Donald Trump more power
50.
Blighty newsletter: Why the Conservatives could be kingmakers
51.
Miami elects a new mayor at a pivotal moment
52.
Iain Douglas-Hamilton, the scientist who saved the elephants
53.
What’s worse for innovation: MAGA or Mao?
54.
Donald Trump is tearing up America’s chip-control policy
55.
MAGA’s man in LatAm
56.
A new breed of quizzer is wresting control of an old hobby
57.
Netflix and Paramount are battling for more than just Warner Bros
58.
How AI is disrupting shopping
59.
Fighting between Thailand and Cambodia breaks out again
60.
What’s behind the revival in the price of British wool
61.
College campuses have become a front line in America’s sports-betting boom
62.
China knows how to punish countries that offend it
63.
Europe bans Russia’s gas exports, but still buys its gas-based fertiliser
64.
The War Room newsletter: A truly radical document
65.
A crisis over using frozen Russian assets to help Ukraine
66.
Which economy did best in 2025?
67.
A giant iron-ore mine could bring Guinea riches or ruin
68.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Don’t count on Congress to restrain Donald Trump
69.
Why Britain’s police forces are taking to AI
70.
2025-12-06 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How AI is rewiring childhood
71.
Why hangovers get worse as you get older
72.
Donald Trump’s bleak vision of America’s foreign-policy priorities
73.
Transcript: An interview with Keir Starmer
74.
America’s peace initiative has stalled in Moscow
75.
Italy’s populist right stalls a sexual-consent law
76.
The Hague is coping with the decline of international courts
77.
Greece is teaching Germany how to get government online
78.
Why a small corruption scandal is a big problem for the EU
79.
Western armed forces have struggled to fill their ranks to deter Russia
80.
Syria uneasily celebrates a year of liberation
81.
China built a swanky cricket pitch to win over tiny Grenada
82.
Republicans still don’t know with Obamacare
83.
A special election puts Democrats on track to flip the House
84.
Some cocaine-smuggling presidents are more innocent than others
85.
What will your child’s Trump Account be worth?
86.
Are Brits really leaving the country in droves?
87.
Polls predicting the next British election are not to be trusted
88.
China’s unlikely new entertainment capital
89.
Even Europe’s penmakers are under threat
90.
To halt their decline, VW and others are turning Chinese
91.
How many hours should employees work?
92.
Will the mega-merger wave destroy value for shareholders?
93.
Syria’s transition has gone better than expected
94.
2025-12-04 The World this Week - Business
95.
2025-12-04 The World this Week - Politics
96.
2025-12-04 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
97.
Britain’s slot-machine politics
98.
Our new model captures the lottery of Britain’s electoral system
99.
The general who refused to crush Tiananmen’s protesters
100.
After a terrible fire in Hong Kong, public fury smoulders
101.
South-East Asia and Sri Lanka are reeling from storms and flooding
102.
Lessons from Japan’s efforts to wean itself off Chinese rare earths
103.
Kyrgyzstan is losing its status as Central Asia’s only democracy
104.
An insurgency may be brewing against Syria’s new leaders
105.
Russia’s dodgy plan for a pipeline in Congo
106.
Binyamin Netanyahu has asked for a presidential pardon
107.
Africa needs to generate more electricity
108.
Britain’s plan to curb jury trials is a sharp break with tradition
109.
Patrick Drahi has bested his lenders yet again
110.
How AI is rewiring childhood
111.
At home and at school, artificial intelligence is transforming childhood
112.
Donald Trump looms over Vladimir Putin’s visit to India
113.
AI misinformation may have paradoxical consequences
114.
Can golden toilets fix China’s economy?
115.
Bitcoin has plunged. Strategy Inc is an early victim
116.
American sanctions are putting Russia under pressure
117.
Our interview with Sir Keir Starmer
118.
A Chinese firm attempts to bring a rocket stage back to Earth
119.
Stockholm is Europe’s new capital of capital
120.
Enough dithering. Europe must pay to save Ukraine
121.
Which Kevin Hassett would lead the Federal Reserve?
122.
Pity the AVOCADOs
123.
Why autism should not be treated as a single condition
124.
Surging satellite numbers threaten to dazzle even space telescopes
125.
Tom Stoppard was an inexhaustible fountain of ideas
126.
From micro-dramas to video games, Chinese entertainment is booming
127.
India’s defence-tech startups are thriving
128.
Why does Donald Trump care about Honduras’s election?
129.
Will Congress rein in Pete Hegseth and his boat-bombing campaign?
130.
Trumpworld thinks Europe has betrayed the West
131.
AIs could turn opinion polls into gibberish
132.
Chris Waller, not Kevin Hassett, should lead the Federal Reserve
133.
Blighty newsletter: Hurrah for the OBR
134.
Ahead of peace talks, Russia’s battlefield advances remain slow
135.
America is foolishly waving goodbye to thousands of Chinese boffins
136.
How to spot a bubble bursting
137.
Leaf blowers are the latest thing dividing Americans
138.
Lessons from the frontiers of AI adoption
139.
The War Room newsletter: Sleepwalking into Africa’s next war
140.
Europe is going on a huge military spending spree
141.
Mormonism’s surprising boom in Africa
142.
European pensions are in dire need of reform
143.
The US in brief: Donald Trump says he has picked next Fed chair
144.
Switzerland votes decisively against inheritance tax
145.
Is America’s jobs market nearing a cliff?
146.
Trafficking humans is the drug-gangs’ grimmest business
147.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Giving thanks in Moscow
148.
A corruption scandal costs Volodymyr Zelensky his top aide
149.
2025-11-28 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: What China will dominate next
150.
Does taping your mouth while you sleep have benefits?
151.
America’s work-from-home capitals are in a sorry state
152.
AI is upending the porn industry
153.
A terrible inferno kills dozens in Hong Kong
154.
Dr Chatbot is popping up all over China
155.
America’s oldest ally in Asia is drawing closer to China
156.
When is a Malaysian footballer not a Malaysian footballer?
157.
Armed men take power in Guinea-Bissau, again
158.
Mired in financial crisis, the Houthis resume threats to Saudi Arabia
159.
The changing shape of Chinese aid to Africa
160.
How Pepsi trounced Coca Cola in the Middle East
161.
Observed in the wild: office snackers and foragers
162.
Europe is struggling to compete in the second space race
163.
American consumers are miserable. But they keep spending
164.
From Nvidia to Nike, American firms face a margin squeeze
165.
2025-11-27 The World this Week - Politics
166.
2025-11-27 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
167.
2025-11-27 The World this Week - Business
168.
Canada’s indigenous-style prisons are designed to right historical wrongs
169.
MAGA is divided over the promise and perils of AI
170.
The federal government will now pay for Native American healing
171.
Chicago is facing a giant budget crisis
172.
“I love the smell of deportations in the morning”
173.
Denmark has become a red-tape-free wedding destination
174.
Turkey’s refs are caught up in a huge sports gambling scandal
175.
Denmark gets ready to cancel Christmas cards
176.
Macron, Merz and Starmer are forming a new trilateral leadership
177.
If the fighting ends in Ukraine, the infighting in Europe will begin
178.
Britain will tax electric cars more heavily. Good
179.
A landmark trial of puberty blockers could end up in court
180.
Who should control British newspapers?
181.
Which country is most similar to Britain?
182.
Why Iran is making surprising overtures to America
183.
Many Israelis believe another war with Iran is coming
184.
Iran’s reformists extend a hand
185.
What China will dominate next
186.
Self-driving cars will transform urban economies
187.
China’s property market is (somehow) worsening
188.
Japan’s big-spending Takaichinomics is ten years out of date
189.
Narendra Modi plans to free up India’s giant labour force
190.
Nepal’s youth toppled the government. Now they want to remake it
191.
Meet the road-building, Muslim-baiting monk who could rule India
192.
A shooting in Washington prefigures tougher immigration policies
193.
One weird trick to solve the affordability crisis
194.
He Yanxin was the steward of a women-only language
195.
Ukraine may be a step closer to peace, or to destruction
196.
This bodge-it budget does not give Britain what it needs
197.
How to avoid an unjust peace in Ukraine
198.
Britain’s left-wing government is left-wing
199.
How to short the bubbliest firms
200.
Britain’s budget prioritised Labour''s political survival
201.
Donald Trump’s revenge agenda is not going well
202.
Why China is pulling ahead in the robotaxi race
203.
When LLMs learn to take shortcuts, they become evil
204.
A new way to generate electricity from water
205.
The writings of John Parker
206.
Investors expect AI use to soar. That’s not happening
207.
Jair Bolsonaro is jailed, leaving the Brazilian right fractured
208.
The wrong sort of peace leads to the next war
209.
Google has pierced Nvidia’s aura of invulnerability
210.
Middle East Dispatch newsletter: A tale from Tehran
211.
A high gold price is luring prospectors to California’s mountains
212.
Colombia’s armed groups are experimenting with deadly drones
213.
Blighty newsletter: What the covid inquiry gets wrong
214.
John Bolton thinks America is past “peak Trump”
215.
The killing of a Hizbullah commander shows how fragile truces are
216.
There’s more to cholesterol than simply “good” or “bad”
217.
Labour’s budget will probably focus on short-term survival
218.
Words to watch out for in Rachel Reeves’s budget
219.
Who will win the trillion-dollar robotaxi race?
220.
The War Room newsletter: Altitude sickness, struggling jets and cold batteries
221.
More Americans are being put to death
222.
Brazil is embracing its African roots
223.
China’s Communist Party wants positive energy only, please
224.
2025-11-24 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: Welcome to Anything Goes America
225.
Ukraine survives another crisis with Donald Trump
226.
AI tokens are surging, but are profits?
227.
Chinese pharma is on the cusp of going global
228.
Why investors are increasingly fatalistic
229.
COP30 ends with a whimper
230.
Donald Trump’s peace plan would be bad for Ukraine, bad for Europe and bad for America
231.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Donald Trump, Jamie Dimon and the aesthetics of power
232.
America has dumped a messy, sordid “peace plan” on Ukraine
233.
River boats are returning Thames transport to Tudor times
234.
Erik Prince, America’s most notorious mercenary, spies opportunity in chaos
235.
Should adults take colostrum supplements?
236.
Transcript: An interview with Abbas Araghchi
237.
An interview with Iran’s foreign minister
238.
The politicians protecting huge criminal networks
239.
How will Japan’s defences evolve under its hawkish new leader?
240.
Where being antediluvian pays
241.
To glimpse Indonesia’s future, look to its president’s view of the past
242.
Israel may not be popular, but its weapons are
243.
A fuel blockade shows the frightening power of Mali’s jihadists
244.
Russian bombing leaves no time to search for keepsakes
245.
Vineyards are disappearing in France
246.
Young MPs are fed up with Germany’s pension burdens
247.
Private equity is reshaping American child care
248.
When companies lose their way
249.
How do you replace a CEO like Tim Cook or Warren Buffett?
250.
2025-11-20 The World this Week - Politics
251.
2025-11-20 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
252.
2025-11-20 The World this Week - Business
253.
Gillian Tindall revelled in the past of ordinary lives
254.
How Chinese underground banks became the world’s biggest money-launderers
255.
How to save the Galápagos from its visitors
256.
How to lower America’s soaring healthcare costs
257.
How Donald Trump is turning into Joe Biden
258.
Release the Epstein files!
259.
AI is accelerating a tech backlash in American classrooms
260.
Will Britain copy asylum policy from a place with poor integration?
261.
Britain’s new effort to balancing human rights and deportations
262.
Britons are becoming less spendthrift
263.
Britain struggles to distinguish between protest and terrorism
264.
Africa’s other debt crisis
265.
That charts that show how much money China lends to the rich world
266.
Mortgage lending in America is seizing up. How to revive it
267.
Indians are getting more fashionable
268.
Why governments should stop raising the minimum wage
269.
Donald Trump and the rise of “insider capitalism”
270.
Visa restrictions are bad for Indians—but maybe not for India
271.
Economists get cold feet about high minimum wages
272.
Can the Chinese economy match Aruba’s?
273.
Chinese regulations and competition are panicking European manufacturers
274.
In Washington, everything appears to be for sale
275.
Can Europe’s deregulation drive actually deregulate anything?
276.
To avoid crushing change, Europe must take control of its destiny
277.
Welcome to Anything Goes America
278.
Texas Republicans have gerrymandered their way into a corner
279.
A terrible American-Russian proposal to end the war in Ukraine
280.
Cracks are appearing in OpenAI’s dominant facade
281.
How Chinese-linked hackers co-opted Anthropic’s Claude
282.
Don’t let a scandal undermine the defence of Ukraine
283.
The panic over a male crisis in Britain is overblown
284.
America’s huge mortgage market is slowly dying
285.
A better way to look for signs of ancient biology
286.
Geothermal kit can help make the power grid flexible
287.
Tech billionaires want to make gene-edited babies
288.
The use of a rare wood pits violinists against environmentalists
289.
China has too many university graduates and too few jobs for them
290.
Is Donald Trump preparing to strike Venezuela or lining up a deal?
291.
The loneliness of America’s model ally
292.
Why crypto’s spectacular market success is going sour
293.
Marjorie Taylor Greene’s big MAGA break up
294.
Blighty newsletter: What Nigel Farage and ASOS have in common
295.
China and Japan are in a vicious game of chicken over Taiwan
296.
Geothermal’s time has finally come
297.
Britain’s controversial experiment in regulating the internet
298.
Cuba is heading for disaster, unless its regime changes drastically
299.
Four charts show how much money China lends to the rich world
300.
Saudi Arabia is in no hurry to join the Abraham accords
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