Filmmaker Raoul Martinez on why he’s profiled the maverick Greek economist Yanis Varoufakis for a new documentary series.
Danny Chivers reports on how the people of Ecuador voted against the oil giants and for the Yasuní National Park.
Abdoulie Ceesay, Gambian representative to COP28, argues that the West must take climate action – not militarization.
Activists meet this weekend to discuss a new internationalism for this century. Viyan Serhildan reports.
Rebecca Jarman and Diana Salazar report on the stark similarities between two mining-related tragedies.
As New Internationalist celebrates its 50th anniversary, Vanessa Baird looks back over five decades of campaigning journalism and inspiration.
How far are states willing to go to spy on dissent? Bethany Rielly reports from Catalonia to find out.
Bethany Rielly asks us to end our judgments over multiple partners.
To address climate change, Clemmie James argues that we must reckon with the environmental impact of the global drug trade.
Priya Lukka explains what reparations could mean, drawing from the rich and varied global movement for repair.
An autocrat in institutional clothing, the Tunisian president has crushed the hopes of democrats in the birthplace of the Arab Spring.
Malaria vaccines are welcome, but they won’t be enough to stop its disease, argues Rosebell Kagumire.
Brazil wants to be a beacon in the fight against global warming, Leonardo Sakamoto writes. Its powerful agribusiness lobby has a different view.
Can the quest for peace in Europe bring calm at home? Rosebell Kagumire asks.
Amy Hall reports from Barbados on abolishing the British monarchy and the legacies of colonialism.
Nanjala Nyabola asks why migration policies have become so deadly, and what it will take to change them.
If you want to build a more just world, we need to confront the legacies of empire, argues Amy Hall.
From spoiled pets to private jets, Naomi Fowler takes a look at the deformities created by the wealthy—and what we can do about it.
Alice McCool imagines a world where countries are not left wearing the West’s cast-offs.
Tom Dale profiles one of the former hotspots of the 2011 Arab Spring, a nation now experiencing a counter-revolutionary moment.
Andrew Feinstein argues that the strategy that helped end South Africa’s apartheid must also be mobilized against Israel.
A new aerial cabaret show explores the housing crisis and the debts of home. Amy Hall reports.
Ibtisaam Babikr profiles the wealthy Gulf state determined to rehabilitate its image.