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Latest updated at: 2025-11-21T03:46:14.509+08:00
View Stat
1.
Transcript: An interview with Abbas Araghchi
2.
An interview with Iran’s foreign minister
3.
The politicians protecting huge criminal networks
4.
How will Japan’s defences evolve under its hawkish new leader?
5.
Where being antediluvian pays
6.
To glimpse Indonesia’s future, look to its president’s view of the past
7.
Israel may not be popular, but its weapons are
8.
A fuel blockade shows the frightening power of Mali’s jihadists
9.
Russian bombing leaves no time to search for keepsakes
10.
Vineyards are disappearing in France
11.
Young MPs are fed up with Germany’s pension burdens
12.
Private equity is reshaping American child care
13.
When companies lose their way
14.
How do you replace a CEO like Tim Cook or Warren Buffett?
15.
2025-11-20 The World this Week - Politics
16.
2025-11-20 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
17.
2025-11-20 The World this Week - Business
18.
Gillian Tindall revelled in the past of ordinary lives
19.
How Chinese underground banks became the world’s biggest money-launderers
20.
How to save the Galápagos from its visitors
21.
How to lower America’s soaring healthcare costs
22.
How Donald Trump is turning into Joe Biden
23.
Release the Epstein files!
24.
AI is accelerating a tech backlash in American classrooms
25.
Will Britain copy asylum policy from a place with poor integration?
26.
Britain’s new effort to balancing human rights and deportations
27.
Britons are becoming less spendthrift
28.
Britain struggles to distinguish between protest and terrorism
29.
Africa’s other debt crisis
30.
That charts that show how much money China lends to the rich world
31.
Mortgage lending in America is seizing up. How to revive it
32.
Indians are getting more fashionable
33.
Why governments should stop raising the minimum wage
34.
Donald Trump and the rise of “insider capitalism”
35.
Visa restrictions are bad for Indians—but maybe not for India
36.
Economists get cold feet about high minimum wages
37.
Can the Chinese economy match Aruba’s?
38.
Chinese regulations and competition are panicking European manufacturers
39.
In Washington, everything appears to be for sale
40.
Can Europe’s deregulation drive actually deregulate anything?
41.
To avoid crushing change, Europe must take control of its destiny
42.
Welcome to Anything Goes America
43.
Texas Republicans have gerrymandered their way into a corner
44.
A terrible American-Russian proposal to end the war in Ukraine
45.
Cracks are appearing in OpenAI’s dominant facade
46.
How Chinese-linked hackers co-opted Anthropic’s Claude
47.
Don’t let a scandal undermine the defence of Ukraine
48.
The panic over a male crisis in Britain is overblown
49.
America’s huge mortgage market is slowly dying
50.
A better way to look for signs of ancient biology
51.
Geothermal kit can help make the power grid flexible
52.
Tech billionaires want to make gene-edited babies
53.
The use of a rare wood pits violinists against environmentalists
54.
China has too many university graduates and too few jobs for them
55.
Is Donald Trump preparing to strike Venezuela or lining up a deal?
56.
The loneliness of America’s model ally
57.
Why crypto’s spectacular market success is going sour
58.
Marjorie Taylor Greene’s big MAGA break up
59.
Blighty newsletter: What Nigel Farage and ASOS have in common
60.
China and Japan are in a vicious game of chicken over Taiwan
61.
Geothermal’s time has finally come
62.
Britain’s controversial experiment in regulating the internet
63.
Cuba is heading for disaster, unless its regime changes drastically
64.
Four charts show how much money China lends to the rich world
65.
Saudi Arabia is in no hurry to join the Abraham accords
66.
A huge corruption scandal threatens Ukraine’s government
67.
Don’t cheer the end of America’s obesity crisis just yet
68.
Russia’s militant bloggers are clashing with their own regime
69.
The War Room newsletter: Ukraine’s war needs more than drones
70.
Shut up, or suck up? How CEOs are dealing with Donald Trump
71.
Europe sees China as a rival. China sees Europe as a has-been
72.
For Israel a psychological reckoning is the price of bloody victory
73.
Beware the scorching gold rally
74.
Can Donald Trump deploy the National Guard whenever he likes?
75.
Checks and Balance newsletter: A positive scenario for America in 2026
76.
2025-11-14 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How markets could topple the economy
77.
Quantum computing is getting real—and Britain wants to lead
78.
Do women need testosterone supplements?
79.
James Watson was stunned by the beauty of the double helix
80.
The way Uyghurs speak Mandarin is now a joke
81.
China’s growing global fan club
82.
The dangers beneath Gaza’s rubble
83.
Ethiopia is perilously close to another war
84.
Chile heads for a sharp right turn
85.
Racy fictional depictions of gangs irk people in Latin America
86.
One of the poorest states in America introduces free child care
87.
Why the Democrats may lose again to Donald Trump
88.
Florida is running a radical experiment in education
89.
Parents on e-bikes are transforming the school run
90.
How to avoid Africa’s next war
91.
Mexico’s surprising record on murder
92.
2025-11-13 The World this Week - Politics
93.
2025-11-13 The World this Week - Business
94.
2025-11-13 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
95.
China’s creepiest export surge
96.
Asia’s most treacherous sailing season
97.
Japanese women are wrestling with sumo’s boundaries
98.
Half a century after the death of Franco, Spain is a far better place
99.
How Italy’s mafia uses social media to recruit new blood
100.
Europe is cracking down on Russian tourists
101.
Labour’s tax-and-spend policy has been dominated by wild gambling
102.
British businesses say they are furious with the government
103.
A slimy scheme to avoid property tax
104.
Libellous chatbots could be AI’s next big legal headache
105.
TSMC’s cautious expansion is frustrating the AI industry
106.
The 10-4 rule for interacting with customers
107.
Elon Musk’s 1trn pay deal highlights companies’ superstar dilemma
108.
Tree murders and the economics of crime
109.
How markets could topple the global economy
110.
How AI is breaking cover letters
111.
The hidden risks in Taiwan’s boom
112.
Taiwan’s amazing economic achievements are yielding alarming strains
113.
Which is India’s superstar state?
114.
Kerala can teach India a thing or two about social welfare
115.
A bombing in Delhi raises tensions in the region
116.
Gaza’s zombie ceasefire
117.
The seven deadly sins of corporate exuberance
118.
In defence of personal finance
119.
Sir Keir Starmer is a prisoner of the politics he pledged to end
120.
Why Britain may have stopped sharing some intelligence with America
121.
America and China share a dangerous addiction
122.
See how Donald Trump is creating his own police force
123.
Sperm whales communicate with vowels
124.
Babies made in China
125.
Even on Ukraine’s front line there is time, and a need, for beauty
126.
How the exasperating, indispensable BBC must change
127.
The costs of dating your boss
128.
Democrats collapsed in the shutdown fight
129.
The promise and the perils of using AI for therapy
130.
Old folk are seized by stockmarket mania
131.
Beijing insiders’ plan to play Donald Trump
132.
Blighty newsletter: Labour retreats to its comfort zone
133.
Despite claims, foreign students have not yet been put off America
134.
Syria joins the American-led fight against Islamic State
135.
The War Room newsletter: Nuremberg 80 years on, a reckoning
136.
Mexico has become a less deadly place under Claudia Sheinbaum
137.
Recessions have become ultra-rare. That is storing up trouble
138.
How HR took over the world
139.
The BBC’s boss quits over a “doctored” Trump speech
140.
Acknowledgements
141.
A new project aims to predict how quickly AI will progress
142.
Four charts explain why Donald Trump is in trouble
143.
Georgia is dousing the last embers of democracy
144.
The mystery of America’s shutdown economy
145.
South Korea’s new president is fixing relations with America, Japan and China
146.
Checks and Balance newsletter: How Donald Trump became Joe Biden
147.
2025-11-07 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: The great relationship recession
148.
Elon Musk’s 1trn pay deal is a troubling display of corporate capture
149.
Can peptides give you superpowers?
150.
Zohran Mamdani lost in parts of NYC that look most like America
151.
Hemedti: warlord, power-broker and the new sultan of Darfur
152.
Climate Issue newsletter: China, the climate superpower
153.
Sources and acknowledgments
154.
America’s plans for a Golden Dome are dangerously obscure
155.
What a leaked transcript reveals about China’s muscular statecraft
156.
Hong Kongers support gay marriage. Their leaders, not so much
157.
America and China circle each other in the South China Sea
158.
Indonesia raids its rainy-day pot
159.
The death of Thailand’s queen mother reveals changing attitudes to the monarchy
160.
A Czech shift to the right is worrying news for Ukraine
161.
Ukraine’s valiant defence of Pokrovsk is nearing its end
162.
Why moderates are reclaiming Europe’s national flags
163.
Pope Leo XIV is infuriating MAGA Catholics
164.
Should facial analysis help determine whom companies hire?
165.
America’s furniture-makers exemplify the folly of tariffs
166.
China’s life-sciences industry is turning American
167.
2025-11-06 The World this Week - Politics
168.
2025-11-06 The World this Week - Business
169.
2025-11-06 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
170.
Will anything—or anyone—stop the slaughter in Sudan?
171.
Tanzania has its Tiananmen moment
172.
Donald Trump says he may strike Nigeria to save Christians. Really?
173.
Iraq’s election may ensure stability but leave militias in control
174.
War looms in Venezuela as Trump tests an “Americas First” doctrine
175.
The rise and fall of America’s model mobile crisis service
176.
America’s health-care costs are shooting up
177.
Brand Britain has bounced back
178.
A British legal ruling about AI delights nobody
179.
Boom times in a British manufacturing town
180.
Nigel Farage’s newfound fiscal prudence is welcome, if unproven
181.
India’s women win the cricket World Cup
182.
South Asia’s water wars
183.
What explains India’s peculiar stability?
184.
Don’t blame AI for your job woes
185.
America should not push other countries to adopt the dollar
186.
A night of big wins for the Democrats
187.
China’s clean-energy revolution will reshape markets and politics
188.
The rise of singlehood is reshaping the world
189.
A new industry of AI companions is emerging
190.
All over the rich world, fewer people are hooking up and shacking up
191.
Dick Cheney divided Americans
192.
Donald Trump’s tariffs could soon be toast
193.
Why Palantir’s success will outlast the AI exuberance
194.
Golden Dome is one of the most ambitious military projects ever
195.
Universal child care can hurt children
196.
Investors are telling Britain to cheer up a bit
197.
If Labour cranks up income taxes, the left will boo loudest
198.
Was the Pacific Palisades blaze a “zombie fire”?
199.
Democrats risk drawing the wrong lessons from one good day
200.
Jordan Bardella starts to lay out his plans
201.
Tracking American drug-boat strikes off Venezuela’s coast
202.
Israel’s politicians are taking on its lawyers once again
203.
How much wealth would be destroyed by an AI stockmarket crash?
204.
Gerrymandering is now the wind beneath Gavin Newsom’s wings
205.
Democrats win big in New York, New Jersey and Virginia
206.
For the first time, climate models show the 1.5C goal is dead
207.
China places a Hong Kong-sized bet on Western decline
208.
First, Labubu’s grinning dolls. Now, a TV show and theme parks
209.
How the sheriff of St Louis ended up in jail
210.
Blighty newsletter: Is Farage more like Trump, Wilders or Meloni?
211.
Analysing Africa newsletter: Donald Trump is focusing on the wrong atrocities
212.
Nigel Farage bows to the bond market
213.
How Donald Trump can dodge a Supreme Court tariff block
214.
An EU-Mercosur trade deal looks close to ratification
215.
The mystery of China’s slumping investment
216.
Will AI make dating apps better—or even worse?
217.
War is blasting Ukraine’s border city of Kharkiv but boosting Lviv
218.
The rise and fall of Stacey Abrams’s political machine
219.
China’s air-quality improvements have hastened global warming
220.
How to clean up the world’s biggest polluter
221.
The boom boon
222.
The world’s renewable-energy superpower
223.
How China sparked a rooftop solar revolution in Pakistan
224.
Why climate change now threatens China’s future
225.
How a little Chinese island rose to global chemical dominance
226.
The War Room newsletter: Did a Russian weapon spook Trump?
227.
Woke football stickers are going viral in Britain
228.
Introducing our free newsletter on health and wellness
229.
Is Donald Trump as unpopular as he seems?
230.
How to beat the hard right, Netherlands edition
231.
China’s Belt and Road Initiative is booming
232.
Has Airbnb reached its peak?
233.
Why Wall Street won’t see the next crash coming
234.
2025-11-01 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: The battle for New York
235.
Donald Trump’s alarming muddle about nuclear-weapons testing
236.
Checks and Balance newsletter: Tear gas and Halloween in Chicago
237.
The War Room newsletter: The most successful amphibious invasion
238.
Curtis Sliwa’s tough-guy mien evokes an older New York
239.
Giorgia Meloni and Nigel Farage compared
240.
Can a dopamine detox reset your brain?
241.
How many people are already being killed by climate change?
242.
What a popular murderer reveals about Japan
243.
At long last, Timor-Leste joins ASEAN
244.
How East Asian pop culture is inspiring Gen Z protests
245.
Aid cuts are devastating health services in Africa
246.
The limits of Turkey’s influence in Syria are showing
247.
Darfur’s besieged capital falls to the Rapid Support Forces
248.
The next stage of the Trump peace plan for Gaza is stalling
249.
An Egyptian comedian makes a (virtual) comeback
250.
Jamaica’s nightmare comes true
251.
The Colombian left has chosen a successor to Gustavo Petro
252.
The data-centre backlash is brewing in America
253.
A basketball scandal highlights vulnerabilities in sports betting
254.
Crunching the numbers on every NYC marathon finisher since 2021
255.
Led by Nvidia, the AI industry has plans to reindustrialise America
256.
Trump 2028
257.
Sweden’s leading business dynasty prepares for succession
258.
LinkedIn and the art of self-promotion
259.
Porsche’s warning lights are flashing
260.
Google v Microsoft: the battle of AI business models
261.
The Trump administration’s approach to global health is flawed but fixable
262.
Against all odds, Peter Gurney loved his work
263.
Europe’s need for green electricity is blowing fuses
264.
France’s finance minister on how to pass a budget
265.
Turkey’s president is moving to eviscerate democracy
266.
The Finnish lifestyle philosophy that could save Europe
267.
A fresh approach to helping children with special educational needs
268.
A Welsh startup wants to make semiconductors in space
269.
2025-10-30 The World this Week - Politics
270.
2025-10-30 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
271.
2025-10-30 The World this Week - Business
272.
Investors will help Jamaica recover from Hurricane Melissa
273.
The new globalisation paradox
274.
In their first meeting in six years, Trump and Xi agree a trade truce
275.
What will it cost to make Putin stop?
276.
Why funding Ukraine is a giant opportunity for Europe
277.
Asia adapts to Donald Trump’s transactional diplomacy
278.
A fractious but working relationship
279.
The battle for New York
280.
As new jobs in finance dry up, New York City’s fiscal model is wilting
281.
Zohran Mamdani wants to make New York great again
282.
The Dutch choose optimism over anti-immigrant populism
283.
India’s IPO boom is good news for its economy
284.
A letter to investors from the White House Opportunities Fund
285.
Europe’s defence firms are flying. Now for the hard part
286.
A bloody police raid in Rio was the deadliest in Brazil’s history
287.
Scientists may have found a panacea for snake bites
288.
America is upgrading GPS to catch up with rivals
289.
Javier Milei’s chance to transform Argentina and teach the world
290.
The idolatry of victimhood
291.
Tear gas and Halloween costumes in America’s third largest city
292.
Britain’s overstretched prisons are releasing inmates by mistake
293.
Blighty newsletter: Boys and their toys
294.
The Economist is hiring a Britain political correspondent
295.
Hurricane Melissa is one of the strongest storms ever recorded
296.
Donald Trump’s trade power is vast, but self-defeating
297.
How pig organs may soon save lives
298.
What the Trump-Xi meeting can and can’t solve
299.
Weight-loss drugs are spreading across the world
300.
A political drama for the ages, opening soon in New York City
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