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Long walk of the dead woman

OPINIONS

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Aug-18
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Prospect
Editorial
As first the man in charge of negotiating Britain’s
Letters & opinions
Letters & opinions
Brexit does not inevitably lead to the breakup of the
Russia’s poisonous designs
The events in Salisbury sound like a paranoid conspiracy, but they are a physical reality
Economics as if the Earth mattered
Even revisionist textbooks shrink from the obvious: growth cannot go on forever
Off the buses
We spend too much time worrying about trains. Buses are the real transport crisis
Growing comfort
A garden is an escape from the news cycle
A quiet revolution
Genuine change is coming to Ethiopia—from a surprising source
Speed data
Falling heroes
Britain’s diminishing armed forces
The Duel
Should big tech be broken up?
YES The online landscape is dominated by a handful
Features
What starts if Brexit stops?
In the two years since the referendum, politics in
The Left road to remain
The way to stay in has to start by grappling with why so many wanted out. We need to put pay and conditions centre stage at home, and work with citizens across Europe to stand up against unfettered capitalism
How to stop the clock and stay in
In a Europe of rising populism it will not be easy, explains Nick Clegg, but the liberal centre should keep the faith
The pitfalls
What strikes me most about the Brexit discussions in
The prizes
We’re set to leave the EU at a moment of extraordinary
…and the things you didn’t see coming
Lacking any organised domestic opposition, Emmanuel
The Hersh reality
The strange story of how the legendary investigative journalist Seymour Hersh came to echo Assad’s propaganda
UN-diplomatic
The UN’s human rights chief has had enough— and now he’s speaking out, writes Tom Fletcher
The ermine election
The House of Lords is even more absurd than you think
Where has all the sperm gone
Sperm counts have been decreasing for decades. Nobody seems to know why it’s happening, and not much is being done to find out, but we could be facing a public health disaster
Maestro in miniature
Musical prodigies are getting more common than ever. What does it take for a child to become a world-beater? And what are the chances of messing them up?
The way we were
Parliamentary turmoil
Extracts from memoirs and diaries, chosen by Ian Irvine
Arts & books
The wrong catastrophe
Before 2008 some economists were warning of a looming crash—but when it came, it wasn’t the one they expected, discovers Duncan Weldon
Gilded gutter lives
Post-war British painters like Francis Bacon and Lucian Freud are valued as much for their rackety lives as their artistic explorations, says Tanya Harrod
Great empire, little minds
Trump’s rise has deep roots in America’s mythology of itself, says Diane Roberts
When love dared to speak
Only in his supposedly lost last years was Oscar Wilde free to express his genius in his life, finds Alex Dean
Books in brief
The greatest issue of our time in political economy
Recommends
In 2013 the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art
Life
The grammar of sexism
If you think we have it hard when it comes to gender-inclusivity
The strategy is: have no strategy
“I think they’re trying to send me a message”, the
The chef’s tale
On 20th June, World Refugee Day, I sat with Mohammad
Sweet success
A lot of people don’t like sweet wine—but not all sweet
Throwing good money after bad
Most people want to invest responsibly. Recent research
Policy report: Environment
Q&A with Michael Gove
Michael Gove is determined to introduce a green strain into Conservatism, and the government has had some eye-catching wins with its environmental policies. But air pollution has not been addressed—and on the bigger subject of climate change how can Britain urge green reforms on much larger, dirtier, nations?
Policies for the planet?
Edmund Burke, that great Conservative inspiration,
Our poisoned air
Labour has always been the party of jobs and social
What can Britain do?
How unusual that the “environment” minister Michael
Things to do this month
Events
The Prospect Book Club meets every third Monday of the month (excluding bank holidays) at 6.30pm at 2 Queen Anne’s Gate, London, SW1H 9AA. To book tickets please visit prospectmagazine.co.uk/events
Endgames
The generalist by Didymus
1 Ancient Roman town buried by the eruption of Vesuvius
Enigmas & puzzles
Down at the World Cup wine bar, three friends Antwit
Brief Encounter
Brief encounter
A volcanic eruption that produced a landslide in Colombia