Anatomy of a crisis: the facts on Europe’s refugees
What are the true figures on the crisis – and how many asylum seekers are countries taking?
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What are the true figures on the crisis – and how many asylum seekers are countries taking?
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This week’s First Thoughts from the New Statesman’s former editor.
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The left-winger’s opponents are divided between conciliation and aggression.
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Britain must accept more asylum-seekers, and create a sustainable plan for their integration into wider society.
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Finishing The Shepherd’s Crown was a double sadness: not just goodbye to Terry Pratchett, but goodbye to a younger, less…
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A black hole is the ultimate physics laboratory.
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Last month three Greek men posing as coastguards were arrested for preying on migrants. With so many people on…
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Now that the interview-based podcast WTF has had millions of downloads and featured guests from Iggy Pop and Barack Obama, what does…
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In both sport and business, players with independent temperaments are often dragged into the middle ground, undermining their value.
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On a personal account, emails can be deleted permanently, but most government services will store even deleted emails in…
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No sick person responds to their diagnosis by thinking, “I can scam taxpayers for £73 a week!”
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If the British and others are right, then much of what has looked immovable in the Middle East is…
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Is America heading for theocracy? How worrying is the rise of the Tea Party? Christopher Hitchens and Richard Dawkins…
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The former Archbishop of Canterbury reflects on the politics of Pope Francis.
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The return of the Tories.
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The clichéd decade: Cradle to Grave and Danny and the Human Zoo reviewed.
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So why isn’t the BBC making more of a fuss about it?
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On a rock in the Atlantic, I felt the magic of place.
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There are things known, and there are things unknown – and they’re all in Rob Chapman’s cultural history of…
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Up and down the country, GP surgeries have been yelping in pain.
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Closed Curtain, by Jafar Panahi, was created despite its director’s house arrest in Iran.
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Iris Murdoch can bring you into a whole new world. How can radio capture her?
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Steve Silberman’s Neurotribes, winner of the 2015 Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-fiction, champions “neurodiversity”.
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That night he takes the freight ferry from Heysham to Warrenpoint and stands by the railing of the upper…
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I don’t mind the frisson of fear – without it, I might relapse into Kingoonya altogether.
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“Weren’t you meant to see Blair this morning?” “Um, yeah. I didn’t really feel like it.”
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Watching the game was grim. Hearing it, too, would only have made it worse.
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Thoughts on the Bachelor Condition: #2 in an occasional series. (Or number 300-odd, if we assume this whole column…
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