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Latest updated at: 2025-06-21T03:26:10.764+08:00
View Stat
1.
MAGA devotees are split over going to war with Iran
2.
Trump v Iran: a negotiation made in hell
3.
Do longevity drugs work?
4.
2025-06-20 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
5.
Gaza is in a bloody limbo as the battle over Iran rages
6.
Mark Zuckerberg is spending megabucks on an AI hiring spree
7.
The family saga at Germany’s media colossus takes an unusual twist
8.
Victoria’s Secret is struggling to reinvent itself
9.
Can a car boss turn around Gucci’s owner?
10.
On the 50th anniversary of “Ways of Seeing” and “G.”
11.
Brian Wilson attracted a fame he could hardly endure
12.
Can men and women be just friends?
13.
Chinese consumers are splurging—but probably not for long
14.
China has become the most important enabler of Russia’s war machine
15.
Rich Chinese cities are suffocating poor ones
16.
Can South Korea’s new president get his country back on track?
17.
Could Trump can AUKUS?
18.
China is trying to win over Africa in the global trade war
19.
The war in Sudan is spilling over its borders
20.
Africa’s scary new age of high-tech warfare
21.
Democrats could do a lot better with the power they hold
22.
Congestion pricing in Manhattan is a predictable success
23.
Our model suggests President Trump is under water in every swing state
24.
The New York mayor’s race is a study in Democratic Party dysfunction
25.
Next week’s NATO summit will be all about placating Donald Trump
26.
Serbia’s Aleksandar Vucic is rattled
27.
Ukraine looks abroad to boost its manpower
28.
Europe wants to show it is ready for war. But would anyone show up to fight one?
29.
A revival for the classic Renault 5
30.
Corruption at the heart of his party wounds Spain’s prime minister
31.
The English Midlands is unjustly overlooked
32.
Biotech is coming to Wales
33.
To keep Russia out and America in, NATO must spend more
34.
What the “cockroaches” of the ad world teach about dealing with AI
35.
Drone warfare is hitting Haiti
36.
Brazilians love football. Their national team is past its prime
37.
Police allege that Jair Bolsonaro sanctioned a spy ring
38.
2025-06-19 The World this Week - Politics
39.
2025-06-19 The World this Week - Business
40.
2025-06-19 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
41.
Israel’s blitz on Iran is fraught with uncertainty
42.
India’s and China’s civil-service exams are notoriously difficult
43.
Why India has so many snakebites
44.
The “Scream” franchise adds another self-referential sequel
45.
The Hollywood Foreign Press Association does penance for its sins
46.
Where will the Iran-Israel war end?
47.
Why MAGA’s pro-natalist plans are ill-conceived
48.
Japan’s government bonds: this time it won’t end well
49.
Who are the world’s best investors?
50.
Japan is obsessed with rice. And prices have gone ballistic
51.
Japan’s debts are shrinking. Its troubles may only be starting
52.
A White House love-in for Pakistan’s big man outrages India
53.
Climate change will hurt the richest farmers—and the poorest
54.
Will the Iran war trigger a refugee crisis?
55.
Exclusive: inside the spy dossier that led Israel to war
56.
AI is turning the ad business upside down
57.
The grooming-gangs scandal is a stain on the British state
58.
Investors ignore world-changing news. Rightly
59.
America’s huge bunker-busting bomb is not sure to work in Iran
60.
The attacks in Minnesota reflect a worrying trend
61.
How to find the smartest AI
62.
Are China’s universities really the best in the world?
63.
Meet the moths that use the stars to find their way
64.
The rise of Nigel McFarage
65.
Trump draws ever closer to strikes on Iran
66.
The strange history of the tribe courted by Donald Trump
67.
Why China is giving away its tech for free
68.
Blighty newsletter: The migration theory of everything
69.
The Arab world thinks differently about this Iran war
70.
MI6’s new “C” used to be “Q”. And she’s good with the gadgets
71.
In Trumpworld, toppling rulers is taboo
72.
Israel is racing to deliver a killer blow to Iran’s nuclear dream
73.
Will Iran’s hated regime implode?
74.
The world’s most liveable cities in 2025
75.
Emmanuel Macron flies in to show his support for Greenland
76.
Why today’s graduates are screwed
77.
What employees think of their companies’ values
78.
How to build the right corporate culture
79.
Trump’s three excruciating choices on Iran
80.
The Israel-Iran war is now a brutal test of staying power
81.
Can China reclaim its IPO crown?
82.
Protests against a regal presidency have been notably peaceful
83.
This time Hizbullah isn’t helping Iran
84.
Correction: Canada minerals story
85.
Destroying Iran’s nukes is Netanyahu’s obsession
86.
Trump is urged to go “all in” on crushing Iran
87.
Six charts show ICE’s expanding immigration crackdown
88.
Tracking the Israel-Iran war
89.
What an Israel-Iran war means for oil prices
90.
Britain’s newest way of demoralising doctors
91.
The world needs to understand the deep oceans better
92.
Can you pass the toughest tests in the world?
93.
Gavin Newsom is ready for his close-up
94.
2025-06-13 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
95.
Is the “manopause” real?
96.
Israel has taken an audacious but terrifying gamble
97.
The War Room newsletter: Why Israel attacked Iran—and what comes next
98.
Iran’s regime has a huge problem: how to retaliate
99.
Was Iran really racing for nukes?
100.
Israel launches an attack on Iran—without America
101.
An interview with Daniel Noboa, Ecuador’s president
102.
An Air India jet to London crashes minutes after take-off
103.
Jessamine Chan’s gripping debut novel sends up modern parenting
104.
It was hard for any viewer to look away from Sidney Poitier
105.
In Japan, festivals are boldly taking art into the countryside
106.
“Aftermath” is a piercing study of Germany after 1945
107.
Bride prices are surging in China
108.
Would you want to know if you were terminally ill?
109.
If China invaded Taiwan, who would enter the war?
110.
Conspiracy, cock-up or solution? The Gaza aid foundation
111.
Globalisation is nuts
112.
How a Christian group is changing education in America
113.
The true meaning of Trump Derangement Syndrome
114.
How Ireland became the Saudi Arabia of siphoned-off global profits
115.
Five opposition-backed referendums fail in Italy
116.
As the NATO summit approaches, more than cash is at stake
117.
Picasso’s home town is thriving
118.
How to curb organised crime without shredding civil rights
119.
Why the West has stopped losing its religion
120.
A Harvard man turned narco-gang-buster
121.
Political violence has returned to Colombia
122.
Bolivia wants the world to stop treating coca leaves like drugs
123.
The world’s biggest food company plans to beef up in America
124.
Make America French Again
125.
2025-06-12 The World this Week - Politics
126.
2025-06-12 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
127.
2025-06-12 The World this Week - Business
128.
The English have become wine producers as well as wine consumers
129.
Inverted commas are falling out of fashion
130.
Valmik Thapar was in love with all the tigers of India
131.
China’s “low-altitude economy” is taking off
132.
How to invest your enormous inheritance
133.
Dominant languages can spread even without coercion
134.
An expert on civil war issues a warning about America
135.
The economic lessons from Ukraine’s spectacular drone success
136.
The world must escape the manufacturing delusion
137.
When a radical performance artist has command of an army
138.
The meaning of the protests in Los Angeles
139.
In the age of AI, Apple needs to open up
140.
Fading Modi-momentum
141.
Can India be an AI winner?
142.
Can India really innovate?
143.
For once, London is short-changed by the government
144.
Rachel Reeves has decided where Britain’s cash will go
145.
Shining light on America’s missing man in Syria
146.
European stocks are buoyant. Firms still refuse to list there
147.
Rachel Reeves’s big-government rhetoric is a worrying sign for Britain
148.
The gangster Israel is arming to fight Hamas
149.
Carney’s colossal Canada-US pact
150.
A new sort of unrest rattles Northern Ireland
151.
Why are girls still falling behind in maths?
152.
Donald Trump can call in the troops
153.
A routine test for fetal abnormalities could improve a mother’s health
154.
Microwave blasters can down even jam-proof drones
155.
China’s booze business looks smashed
156.
Welcome to Bonnie Blue’s Britain
157.
Can robotaxis put Tesla on the right road?
158.
Luxury property’s final frontier
159.
Taiwan thinks the unthinkable: resisting China without America
160.
The cities winning from war
161.
Is there a “woke right” in America?
162.
Factory work is overrated. Here are the jobs of the future
163.
Blighty newsletter: Fiscal choices, big and small
164.
Might the Royal Air Force go nuclear again?
165.
How America and China spooked each other
166.
What’s happening in LA could be a template for the Trump administration
167.
A surprising power shift inside Hamas
168.
The rise of the loner consumer
169.
The War Room newsletter: Britain’s defence goals are admirably absurd
170.
A checklist for decision-making
171.
Donald Trump’s new travel ban is coming into effect
172.
Putin unleashes a summer offensive to break Ukraine
173.
Sending the National Guard to LA is not about stopping rioting
174.
Can Tim Cook stop Apple going the same way as Nokia?
175.
2025-06-06 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
176.
Donald Trump has many ways to hurt Elon Musk
177.
The 11-year-old Ukrainian YouTuber snapping at MrBeast’s heels
178.
Who is ahead in the global tech race?
179.
How much protein do you really need?
180.
Muslim “modest-wear” is a hit with fashionistas of all faiths
181.
The Ugandan state unlawfully detains a novelist
182.
Sources and acknowledgments
183.
China is benefiting from the hell in Myanmar
184.
Amanda Feilding fought to rescue the reputation of psychedelics
185.
Africa’s cynical master of power politics
186.
Kurdish armed groups are laying down their weapons
187.
Police are cracking down on cyclists in New York City
188.
Pete Hegseth once scared America’s allies. Now he reassures them
189.
California’s carbon market reaches an inflection point
190.
What a New Jersey election says about MAGA America
191.
Can Britain untangle the mess in its water industry?
192.
A ruling in Britain stokes fears of backdoor blasphemy laws
193.
Britain’s AI-care revolution isn’t flashy—but it is the future
194.
The renovation of Manchester Town Hall will be late, costly, and worth it
195.
How old are the Dead Sea Scrolls? An AI model can help
196.
2025-06-05 The World this Week - Business
197.
2025-06-05 The World this Week - Politics
198.
2025-06-05 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
199.
Chinese students want an American education less than they used to
200.
A savage EV price war terrifies China’s government
201.
The mystery of China’s missing military
202.
Mexico’s ruling party, Morena, has captured the judiciary
203.
Swimming-pool economics haunt Latin America
204.
Suriname’s chaotic democracy just chose its first woman president
205.
Ukraine smashes Russia’s air force and a key bridge
206.
The constitution that never was still haunts Europe 20 years on
207.
What Bicester Village says about the luxury industry
208.
How managing energy demand got glamorous
209.
Germany thinks about cancelling a public holiday
210.
AI agents are turning Salesforce and SAP into rivals
211.
Africa’s most admired dictator rolls the dice
212.
The real reason Indians are lost
213.
Trump’s tariffs have so far caused little inflation
214.
Can India create its own Ivy League?
215.
Stanley Fischer mixed rigour and realism, compassion and cool-headedness
216.
The stunning decline of the preference for having boys
217.
America’s tax on foreign investors could do more damage than tariffs
218.
Trump thinks Americans consume too much. He has a point
219.
More and more parents around the world prefer girls to boys
220.
A short history of Greenland, in six maps
221.
Asia’s forgotten hellscape
222.
A new London attraction hopes to revive interest in Elvis
223.
Israel “won’t commit suicide” says the government’s ideologue
224.
Who would pay America’s “revenge tax” on foreigners?
225.
Why investors lack a theory of everything
226.
Meet SCOTUSbot, our AI tool to predict Supreme Court rulings
227.
All pain, no gain
228.
A leaderless NASA faces its biggest-ever cuts
229.
Germany is building a big scary army
230.
The Economist’s digital journalist internship
231.
Which universities will be hit hardest by Trump’s war on foreign students?
232.
To earn American help, allies are told to elect nationalists
233.
The West is rethinking how to fight wars
234.
Blighty newsletter: Shoreditch’s festival of creativity—and AI anxiety
235.
The hard-right’s champion blows up the Dutch government
236.
Wanted: a producer/editor for our Video Department
237.
The Alzheimer’s drug pipeline is healthier than you might think
238.
Lee Jae-myung is South Korea’s likely next president
239.
Elon Musk’s failure in government
240.
Putin’s sickening statistic: 1m Russian casualties in Ukraine
241.
The fantastical world of Republican economic thinking
242.
Even as the Murdochs bitterly feud, their empire thrives
243.
The War Room newsletter: How Ukraine humbled Putin (again)
244.
A short guide to salary negotiations
245.
Britain’s ambitious plan to rearm looks underfunded
246.
What Poland’s new hard-right president means for Europe
247.
Poland’s presidential election goes down to the wire
248.
An astonishing raid deep inside Russia rewrites the rules of war
249.
China is waking up from its property nightmare
250.
Will the UAE break OPEC?
251.
Why stricter voting laws no longer help Republicans
252.
There is an “imminent” threat to Taiwan, America warns
253.
Why the president must not be lexicographer-in-chief
254.
2025-05-30 The World this Week - Cover Story newsletter: How we chose the cover image
255.
Can AI be trusted in schools?
256.
How much coffee is too much?
257.
Karol Nawrocki, a possible Polish president with a shadowy past
258.
China calls the shots in Myanmar’s civil war
259.
The chilling impact of Gerry Adams’s court win against the BBC
260.
The Uber of the underworld
261.
Australia’s conservatives bicker in the political wilderness
262.
Myanmar’s scam empire gets worse, not better
263.
Nayib Bukele is devolving from tech-savvy reformer to autocrat
264.
Simon Mann was the go-to guy for military coups and bespoke warfare
265.
China’s carbon emissions may have peaked
266.
China’s crazy reverse-credit cards
267.
The losers of the new Middle East
268.
What a massacre reveals about Abiy Ahmed’s Ethiopia
269.
Africans are building Putin’s suicide drones
270.
Afrobeats’ new groove
271.
Why Latin American Surrealism is surging in a down art market
272.
Venezuela’s sound of silence
273.
Where next for Britain’s broken National Health Service?
274.
What on earth is what3words?
275.
Harley Street resists a facelift
276.
Sir Keir Starmer’s Scottish reset is under strain
277.
How Labour should save the NHS
278.
First he busted gangs. Now Nayib Bukele busts critics
279.
2025-05-29 The World this Week - Business
280.
2025-05-29 The World this Week - Politics
281.
2025-05-29 The World this Week - The weekly cartoon
282.
America has found a new lever to squeeze foreigners for cash
283.
Why would Texas Republicans object to conservative, pro-family developers?
284.
Demand for American degrees is sinking
285.
America’s immigration detention centres are at capacity
286.
Europe’s tricky trade threesome
287.
A new threat to Erdogan: Gen Z
288.
Europe fantasises about an “Airbus of everything!” Can it fly?
289.
Will European business turn away from America?
290.
Europe’s attempted bonfire of red tape is impressing no one
291.
Can Korea Inc step up?
292.
American finance, always unique, is now uniquely dangerous
293.
Trump’s financial watchdogs promise a revolution
294.
India needs to turn the air-con on
295.
Can India be cool?
296.
Narendra Modi has kept his vow to make India like Gujarat
297.
India has a chance to cure its investment malaise
298.
How might China win the future? Ask Google’s AI
299.
The Economist’s business internship
300.
The War Room newsletter: Explore our “Archive 1945” project
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