Generation game
A closer look at a new wave of parents desperate to raise their children differently.
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A closer look at a new wave of parents desperate to raise their children differently.
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With its local MP preparing for No 10, Clacton has won the argument.
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The former chair of the Federal Trade Commission on the war against corporate power.
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Also this week: Punk rock in Blackpool and on the glory trail in Europe with Hibernian FC.
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Your weekly dose of news and gossip from journalism, broadcasting and beyond.
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Write to [email protected] to have your thoughts voiced in the New Statesman magazine.
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The party is split between Starmerites focused on delivery and a soft left demanding greater radicalism.
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His determination to see the best in Vladimir Putin is compounded by his ignorance about the war.
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The government’s focus on tech could unite Yimbys and Nimbys, as data centres threaten future housing.
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Welcome to the running club powered by electrolytes – and the Holy Spirit.
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This generation are desperate to raise their children differently. Why?
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As Taipei prepares against the threat of invasion from China, the islands’ domestic politics are increasingly divided.
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Whoever the next archbishop of Canterbury will be, they face a legacy of scandal, doctrinal division and dwindling congregations.
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As Israel approves a new settlement that will divide the West Bank, communities face erasure.
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In her new memoir, Scotland’s former first minister reckons with the failures and pain of a career in politics…
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Queen Elizabeth’s second son had everything he ever wanted. That was the problem.
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The historian and educator’s achievements were as long and varied as his contacts book.
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The cult film director on his fixation with youth, his connection to JFK, and memories of Studio 54.
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Jay Roach’s reimagined The War of the Roses updates the couple’s casus belli, but their relationship is never plausible.
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In Netflix’s latest slick political drama, Suranne Jones offers a complex psychological portrait of leadership.
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The BBC documentary might have focused less on barnyard noises and more on the interesting details of George Orwell’s…
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Layer up the sliced meats and the corporate bohemians of the West End will come.
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As self-administered weight-loss treatments become more widespread, we are gaining more insight into their potential downsides.
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The people-watching near Brighton’s West Pier was so good my book went entirely unread.
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The elevated public spaces, transport and coffee culture were a revelation; the holiday stomach bug was less welcome.
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This column – which, though named after a line in Shakespeare’s “Richard II”, refers to the whole of Britain…
ByNovember 1913: Christabel Pankhurst calls for militancy in the fight for female suffrage.
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