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Filthy rich Twelve billionaires' climate emissions outpollute 2.1m homes
Twelve of the world's wealthiest billionaires produce more greenhouse gas emissions from their yachts, private jets, mansions and financial investments than the annual energy emissions of more than 2m homes, research shared exclusively with the Guardian reveals.
The oil barons
On the eve of the C op28 climate conference in Dubai, a major new report reveals the deep imbalance between the carbon emissions of the world’s richest and poorest people – and why recognising who is most to blame is an important step towards identifying possible solutions
Strings and bows
Miguel Atwood-Ferguson has worked with Ray Charles and Rihanna; now this child prodigy turned jazzluminary has released agorgeous debutalbum
Cruel performative policies are being used as a smokescreen
This week, Britain's supreme court was due to give its verdict on the Rwanda deportation scheme. The decision will clearly have a major impact on those who face deportation. It will have an impact, too, on the political debate about immigration.
Why is it too much to ask for Palestinians to be viewed as humans?
I do not want to ever hear western democracies lecture the rest of the world on human rights ever again.
The numbers game
Succeeding in love and business, roulette or a pub quiz is easy. You just need to know the right mathematical formula...
The way she was
Barbra Streisand is the Hollywood megastar who's sung for presidents and been a royal pin-up - all while proudly celebrating her Jewish heritage. In her new memoir, the singer and actor shares some tales from an extraordinary career
How soaring inflation could clinch election for Milei
It's 10pm on a weeknight in Palermo, Buenos Aires, and business in the Nuevo D'accordo restaurant is doing well.
The fika principle Why Swedish workplace culture leads the way
Wellbeing allowances, generous parental leave and bonuses for taking breaks are standard perks in Sweden. But would such progressive practices translate to other countries?
Spirit levels The ancient tipple that led to a craft liquor boom
Sheltered in the shade of a mango tree entwined with peppercorn vines, a vast clay pot sits on top of a fire, its lid sealed tight with mud. Distilling within is India's oldest alcoholic spirit, said to date back almost 500 years.
Name dropping Is it time to rethink the way we identify species?
Some scientists say the rules must be changed so plants and animals are not tagged with 'objectionable' denominations
Bogged down Aswinter draws in, the talk grows of stalemate and a long conflict
The Ukrainian counteroffensive has stalled, with progress on the two principal axes on the southern front modest since it began on 4 June. Kyiv's forces have advanced about 10km south of Velyka Novosilka and 9km south of Orikhiv and there appears no prospect of a breakthrough as the weather turns.
Sunak pins hopes on Cameron's return
PM aims to rewrite the Tory narrative with shock appointment, but will it shift the dial with voters?
Resurrected Former PM has experience, but appointment is not without risk
There is a danger that Lord Cameron, with six years' experience as prime minister and umpteen world summits under his belt, as opposed to Rishi Sunak's single year, will be tempted not just to dominate foreign policy but to stray out of his lane and give very broad advice to his boss.
After Bibi Netanyahu's time looks up-but what would follow is less clear
For years, the newspaper Israel Hayom has been known as the \"Bibiton\". A Hebrew portmanteau, it means \"the paper of Bibi\", the nickname for Israel's prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. It was founded by the late billionaire casino magnate Sheldon Adelson as the mouthpiece for Netanyahu.
Besieged No water, no power and little hope in Gaza hospital
Inside a darkened operating theatre in Gaza's largest hospital complex, staff swaddled dozens of tiny premature babies seven or eight to a bed, in a desperate effort to keep the infants warm - and alive. With no oxygen supplies or power for incubators, nurses attempted to provide what little care they could for 39 babies who had been transferred from the neonatal unit following a strike on Dar al-Shifa's intensive care unit.
California dreaming Could Gavin Newsom be a rival to Biden?
One of the strongest candidates for US president in 2024 may be one who's not yet in the race. There's growing evidence that Gavin Newsom, the charismatic and energetic Democratic governor of California, is running something of a shadow campaign to Joe Biden and is ready to step up if, or when, the incumbent is out of the running.
A dividing line Abortion hostility could return to haunt Trump's party in 2024
Republicans beware - abortion retains its saliency. As a corollary, Joe Biden is down but not out. On election day last week, voters in Ohio, Virginia and Kentucky embraced individual autonomy and reproductive rights. Looking forward, the US supreme court's decision in the Dobbs case and the Trumpian majority's rejection of privacy as a fundamental constitutional right stand to haunt Trump and his party as they enter the 2024 election season.
The nightmare scenario
Less than a year before the election, the former president is leading in key polls. Would another Trump term spell disaster for US democracy?
My sweet gourd: creative ways to make the most of pumpkins
I never know what to do with pumpkins besides carve them. Help!
Sonic boom: how classic game got its legs back
The hedgehog's longtime caretaker, Takashi Iizuka, talks about going back to the 90s for new game Sonic Superstars and the blue blur's rivalry with Mario
A master's profound coda
A virtual concert by Ryuichi Sakamoto has captivated audiences. Its creator, Todd Eckert, talks about working with the Japanese composer, who died in March
Is it right or wrong to post about conflict on social media? Hannah Jane Parkinson
The welcome irony is that Martin Niemöller's words about not speaking out are everywhere. If you were not already familiar with First They Came, his urging of resistance in the face of tyranny and persecution, from history class or Holocaust documentaries, you may have seen it on Instagram during the past weeks.
Germany's admirable bond with Israel is becoming a straitjacket
With Gaza bombarded, with thousands dead and its infrastructure largely in ruins, is it ever acceptable for a German to criticise Israel? Almost the entire German political establishment and most of those in public life apparently think not.
The sparring game
Louis Theroux's charm and cheek made him one of the best interviewers in the business. Will he take it on the chin when Zoe Williams turns the tables?
Magnificent megastructures
Utilitarian as they may be, some civic projects are so monumental they approach the sublime. And one of the most elegant is a power station hidden away inside a mountain in the glorious landscape of north Wales
Indigenous ancestry row tarnishes singer's legacy
Allegations in a documentary that the popular American folk singer Buffy Sainte-Marie misrepresented her Indigenous roots have rattled First Nations communities in Canada, where she claims to have been born, highlighting the complex legacy of an artist whose decades-long career is defi ned by advocating for Indigenous rights.
One year out, most US voters don't want Trump or Biden
Americans are one year away from a presidential election that's shaping up to be a historically unpopular rematch between the oldest ever sitting president, Joe Biden, a Democrat, and his Republican predecessor, the twice-impeached, serially indicted Donald Trump.
Ground dispute How a rusting wreck became a geopolitical flashpoint
For more than two decades, a second world war-era ship, BRP Sierra Madre, has stood deliberately grounded in the remote, shallow waters of the fiercely contested South China Sea, carrying the Philippine flag and guarding against Chinese expansion.
Border zone reimagined as a path towards peace
A new tourist trail offers hikers a radical view across the 38th parallel, 75 years after war cut Korea in two