CATEGORIES

How England's Lionesses are changing the game for girls
The Guardian Weekly

How England's Lionesses are changing the game for girls

In five years, 100,000 more girls have taken up the sport in England, shattering myths about their relative abilities

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3 mins  |
August 25, 2023
Kick on
The Guardian Weekly

Kick on

A month-long spectacle, culminating in Spain's thrilling triumph, is another landmark moment for the women's game, in which Europe is the new leader of player development at elite and grassroots levels

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4 mins  |
August 25, 2023
Marvel story
The Guardian Weekly

Marvel story

This tale of a pianist who finds love and renewal before mystical forces intervene is a reminder of Neil Jordan's gifts as a writer

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
The invisible woman
The Guardian Weekly

The invisible woman

George Orwell's first wife has been ill-served by his own biographers, yet here the witty and fierce Eileen is stripped of agency all over again

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
AIrchitecture anyone?
The Guardian Weekly

AIrchitecture anyone?

AI heralds a world where design wonders are just a click away, but could it replace an entire profession?

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8 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Africans, not global powers, will forge the continent's stability
The Guardian Weekly

Africans, not global powers, will forge the continent's stability

A \"coup belt\" now extends across the African continent, running along the Sahel region that bisects north and sub-Saharan Africa. Niger, where the democratically elected president was deposed by a military junta, has now become the last link that completed the corridor of countries run by coupsters.

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
How I learned to swim
The Guardian Weekly

How I learned to swim

As I entered my fifties, my body and my confidence started to falter and fail me. I was told swimming would help keep me fit and strong-minded. But first I had to navigate the aggravation of the slow lane

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10+ mins  |
August 18, 2023
"My mother spent her life trying to find me"
The Guardian Weekly

"My mother spent her life trying to find me"

Countless Bangladeshi children were put up for adoption without the consent of their parents in the chaotic wake of civil war. Denials and scant paperwork hid the truth for years

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10+ mins  |
August 18, 2023
Trump indicted over bid to reverse 2020 election loss
The Guardian Weekly

Trump indicted over bid to reverse 2020 election loss

Donald Trump and some of his closest confidantes have been indicted on state racketeering and conspiracy charges over efforts to reverse Trump's defeat in the 2020 election in Georgia. This indictment makes the former US president a criminal defendant in a fourth case as he campaigns to recapture the presidency.

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
A frail truce The battle for Tigray is not over
The Guardian Weekly

A frail truce The battle for Tigray is not over

Despite a peace deal last year, Eritrean troops remain in border areas, and the Irob community pays the price

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Why Taliban is desperate to silence musicians and artists
The Guardian Weekly

Why Taliban is desperate to silence musicians and artists

Hardline Islamist leaders have imposed brutal restrictions on cultural expression and the Afghan people are suffering

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Shore bet Artwork with a mission to restore reefs
The Guardian Weekly

Shore bet Artwork with a mission to restore reefs

In the turquoise waters of Nacula Island, steel sculptures sit on the seafloor, adorned with coral. The artworks are part of a conservation effort to help grow and restore coral reefs as they face the threat of bleaching because of warmer seas.

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2 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Florida's united effort to turn the tide on coral bleaching
The Guardian Weekly

Florida's united effort to turn the tide on coral bleaching

A race is under way in Florida to rescue corals being bleached at alarming rates as a result of historic heatwaves and rising water temperatures.

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4 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Thousands missing at sea as use of deadliest route rises
The Guardian Weekly

Thousands missing at sea as use of deadliest route rises

The number of people taking the world's deadliest migratory route-across the central Mediterranean - to reach the EU has more than doubled, driving irregular crossings at the bloc's external borders to their highest level in seven years.

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2 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Fresh anger over asylum policy after Channel boat deaths
The Guardian Weekly

Fresh anger over asylum policy after Channel boat deaths

Calls this week mounted in the UK and France for the introduction of safe routes for refugees crossing the Channel after a French organisation said it had received multiple distress calls from people making the crossing.

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2 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Questions fly after paradise is reduced to streets of ash
The Guardian Weekly

Questions fly after paradise is reduced to streets of ash

Atleast 99 people have died in the fire that consumed the historic town of Lahaina on the Hawaiian island of Maui, and officials warned that the effort to find and identify the dead was in its early stages. Meanwhile, residents raised questions over aspects of the government response, from warnings during the fire to aid distribution in the days since.

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2 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Phone apps hit home in Beijing's bid for hearts and minds
The Guardian Weekly

Phone apps hit home in Beijing's bid for hearts and minds

Ariel Lo spends a couple of hours most weeks sharing anime art and memes on Chinese apps, often chatting with friends in China in a Mandarin slightly different from the one she uses at home in Taiwan.

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Great leap backwards? Deflationary slide sparks global fears
The Guardian Weekly

Great leap backwards? Deflationary slide sparks global fears

When two core indicators of Chinese inflation turned negative last week, alarm bells rang as the world's second-largest economy started sliding into deflation. According to Joe Biden, China's economy is a \"ticking timebomb\".

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
'You don't survive that' Sappers dice with death to clear mines
The Guardian Weekly

'You don't survive that' Sappers dice with death to clear mines

Oleksandr Slyusar, a Ukrainian sapper with a ready smile, had spent the past 30 hours under Russian shelling in the recently liberated village of Staromaiorske in the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine. A rocket fired at them from a Grad system had peppered the legs and back of a fellow landmine-clearer with shrapnel.

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Tech bosses issue threats to workers who shun office life
The Guardian Weekly

Tech bosses issue threats to workers who shun office life

Amazon workers in the US are being tracked and penalised for not spending sufficient time in the company's offices, an email sent to employees revealed, as tech companies push back against work-from-home practices that flourished during the pandemic.

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2 mins  |
August 18, 2023
Desk jockeys - Why Britain has felt this seismic shift more than many countries
The Guardian Weekly

Desk jockeys - Why Britain has felt this seismic shift more than many countries

Working from home is a seismic shift in employment patterns that has rocked charities, businesses and public sector organisations across the world.

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3 mins  |
August 18, 2023
OUT OF OFFICE
The Guardian Weekly

OUT OF OFFICE

Covid-19 transformed the way we work. But as lockdown memories fade, firms are pushing back against homebased employees. Who will prevail?

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5 mins  |
August 18, 2023
My legacy? I'm Ferris Bueller
The Guardian Weekly

My legacy? I'm Ferris Bueller

The actor best known for playing a teenager talks about his new very grown-up role in the tale of OxyContin and the film that will always define him

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6 mins  |
August 11, 2023
People are kinder than our cynical politicians will give us credit for
The Guardian Weekly

People are kinder than our cynical politicians will give us credit for

An expiring Tory party lashing about for electoral resuscitation by doubling down on pugnacious policies. A Labour opposition that has straitjacketed its pledges and ambitions with its fears of blowing its strongest chance in years to gain power. That is the slim space that now defines Westminster, making the preoccupations and tones of our politicians seem more remote than ever.

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3 mins  |
August 11, 2023
My escape from China's mass arrests
The Guardian Weekly

My escape from China's mass arrests

When Uyghurs started disappearing into 're-education camps', I knew it was only a matter of time before I would be detained. So I got ready to run

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10+ mins  |
August 11, 2023
'What about Hunter?' Why Biden's son is a GOP target again
The Guardian Weekly

'What about Hunter?' Why Biden's son is a GOP target again

The difference between six and seven is slight but, in the mouth of Joe Biden, it meant everything. \"I have seven grandkids,\" the US president said in a recent podcast interview.

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3 mins  |
August 11, 2023
'Endless possibilities': On a mission to create the materials that don't exist
The Guardian Weekly

'Endless possibilities': On a mission to create the materials that don't exist

Synthetic chemists are moving forward with a breakthrough method known as skeletal editing, which could pave the way for revolutionary advances in medicine and sustainable plastics

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5 mins  |
August 11, 2023
Boom time: The fraught rise of the retail apps
The Guardian Weekly

Boom time: The fraught rise of the retail apps

An online shopping revolution is transforming consumer habits but not everyone has a good deal

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4 mins  |
August 11, 2023
Till truths Prices go up to factor in 'real costs'
The Guardian Weekly

Till truths Prices go up to factor in 'real costs'

A leading discount supermarket in Germany temporarily raised prices to reflect products' real cost on people's health and the environment.

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2 mins  |
August 11, 2023
Rents soar as bid to attract foreign money backfires
The Guardian Weekly

Rents soar as bid to attract foreign money backfires

Government incentives and deregulation have brought digital nomads, Airbnbs and 'golden visas' - but steep housing costs for locals

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4 mins  |
August 11, 2023