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69 MIN READ TIME

Special report: Transport

never before.Here the Transport Secretary and his Labour shadow battle it out, before Prospect’s Jay Elwes explains why he thinks they are violently agreeing—and why they are both wrong

Time to unclog Britain

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Feb-18
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Serving time
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It’s the democracy, stupid
Adam Posen’s cardinal error in his gloomy prognostication
The truth shall be ignored
Alan Johnson (“The Orwellian eye,” January) writes
Brown’s legacy
Jonathan Freedland captured Gordon Brown’s character
Disrupt economics
I enjoyed your look at different aspects of the future
Applying the brakes
Dani Rodrik reminds us that globalisation is not some
Lost-in-hyphenation
May I join the hordes of pedants emailing to say that
In fact
Golf is the most boring sport to watch for Britons:
How the NHS will die
In the explosion of “self-pay” procedures, we are witnessing the beginning of the end
Reclaim the streets
If public spaces are privately owned, where can we protest?
Confessions of a cosmopolitan
There is no need to shut up about difference—but we should talk more about what we have in common
How shrinks can grow our politics
Psychoanalysis can help us make sense of tyranny
The slow road to Jerusalem
On your way to the holy city, there is one snack that you must buy
Speed data
Les misérables
The French have many reasons to be cheerful—and yet they’re not
The Duel
Can trophy hunting ever be justified?
YES It’s the naked hypocrisy of it all that is the
Features
Web of spies
Five corporate giants have captured the open space of the internet. Two, Google and Facebook, have created an entirely new surveillance capitalism. But we’re too hooked to care
Life in the slow lane
Axing net neutrality will make some sites sluggish, and speed up corporate capture
Ballot bots
They’re real, they’re over here and they’re spreading poison.
Policing the net
Beijing is estimated to pay over a quarter of a million
Death by a thousand clicks
Removing the old gatekeepers has left culture in the hands of Big Tech
Prospect Portrait
The opponent
At the end of last year, he saved the prime minister. In 2018, he holds the fate of the whole country in his hands. So it’s probably a good time to pay the Brexit negotiator, Michel Barnier, a little attention, suggests Christine Ockrent
Decline and fall
As elections loom in March, Italy has reached the point where the return of
WHO WERE ISLAMIC STATE?
Mosul is liberated. But there is no end to the suffering of its citizens, many of whom are now falling victim to collective punishment
Unorthodox diplomacy
Churchmen in Moscow and London are negotiating far more effectively than their governments. But are they doing God’s work, or Putin’s?
Touch of evil
In the wake of the Weinstein scandal, once admired male writers, actors and filmmakers have been disgraced. Can we still love the work of artists whose behaviour we loathe?
Today’s Manufacturing Workforce Challenge
Talented people are the backbone of every successful business. As the UK faces up to potentially dramatic changes in its economic landscape and the risks and opportunities that flow from new technologies, it has never been more important for manufacturing companies to have access to a sustainable supply of recruits with the right skills and to develop their current workforce with the skills necessary to translate business strategy into the healthy returns that fuel our prosperity.
The way we were
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Arts & books
Amazing adventures
Kapow! Comics and graphic novels have never been more creative—and even academics are falling under their spell, argues Kim O’Connor
The great game lost
Britain’s 13-year-long war in Afghanistan was a saga of misadventure and miscalculation against an enemy we never knew, says Ahmed Rashid
Raging bull
Donald Trump’s reckless and gossip-addicted biographer is a perfect match for his subject, finds Sam Tanenhaus
Debt and gratitude
An ex-minister’s love letter to universities offers an optimistic verdict, finds Howard Davies
Books in brief
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