The Guardian Weekly - January 19, 2024Add to Favorites

The Guardian Weekly - January 19, 2024Add to Favorites

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January 19, 2024

A deadly trade-off

Political upheaval and street protests, gun battles and floods.

A deadly trade-off

5 mins

Call to arms Gangs fuel 'nightmarish descent into violence'

Who did this, and why?

Call to arms Gangs fuel 'nightmarish descent into violence'

2 mins

I'ma nomad' Durán, the city where it's unsafe for the mayor to sit at his own desk

Luis Chonillo was on his way to be sworn in as the mayor of Ecuador's most murderous city when the gunmen came to murder him.

I'ma nomad' Durán, the city where it's unsafe for the mayor to sit at his own desk

3 mins

Arc of crisis

How Houthi anger with Israel is reshaping the Middle East conflict

Arc of crisis

5 mins

No end in sight as Israel marks 100 days of war

Israelis last weekend marked 100 days of war with a 100-minute pause in the working day and rallies to call for the return of hostages held in Gaza, but little relief from the anxiety that has gripped the country since Hamas launched its 7 October attacks.

No end in sight as Israel marks 100 days of war

2 mins

Crown duel Republicans stir as king takes throne

When the Danish prime minister, Mette Frederiksen, appeared on the balcony of Christiansborg Palace in Copenhagen last Sunday to announce the new monarch, she was met by a sea of cheering faces.

Crown duel Republicans stir as king takes throne

2 mins

Happy haus How Vienna became the world's most livable city

The Austrian capital's radical social housing tradition bucks the trend for soaring rents elsewhere. What is its secret?

Happy haus How Vienna became the world's most livable city

6 mins

Word perfect Activist poet embracing essence of being African

After giving birth, Vanessa Chisakula started writing poetry as a way of processing the changes and struggles she was experiencing as a new mother.

Word perfect Activist poet embracing essence of being African

3 mins

'He wins big' Trump storms the Republican caucuses in Iowa

For some Americans it's a nightmare from which they cannot wake, but for others it's a new chapter in the Maga saga

'He wins big' Trump storms the Republican caucuses in Iowa

3 mins

Boeing's problems are bigger than just nuts and bolts

Aviation is an abundant source of metaphors, but not always as self-generating as the terrifying Alaska Airlines incident that has once again brought Boeing low: a hole blown in the side of an ascending plane, a gap that was not properly plugged, passengers staring into the void.

Boeing's problems are bigger than just nuts and bolts

3 mins

The pastoral Carer

not just about the future of their businesses, but about family, identity and even mortality.

The pastoral Carer

10+ mins

Abuse of unaccountable power is at wicked heart of Post Office scandal

To the widely voiced reasons to admire Alan Bates, the heroically dogged leader of the campaign to achieve justice for the victims of the Post Office scandal, let me add another.

Abuse of unaccountable power is at wicked heart of Post Office scandal

3 mins

Outside in

The Chinese American screen director Lulu Wangon The Expats, her complex new TV series set in 2014 Hong Kong

Outside in

7 mins

Why China and India are tapping into Top Gun

The new superpowers have fallen for the action-packed world of blockbuster air force films, but can their efforts be anything more than military propaganda?

Why China and India are tapping into Top Gun

3 mins

Nature trail A physicist turns his hand to life science, to explore how commonly held models of why we're here are wildly oversimplified

You might think, with the completion of the Human Genome Project more than 20 years ago, and the discovery of the double helix enjoying its 70th birthday last year, that we actually know how life works. In physics, the quest for a so-called Grand Unifying Theory has preoccupied the most ambitious minds for generations, alas to no avail. But in the life sciences, we managed to find four grand unifying theories in the space of 100 years or so.

Nature trail A physicist turns his hand to life science, to explore how commonly held models of why we're here are wildly oversimplified

3 mins

Use your noodle: DIY ramen is a no-brainer if you've got the time

Can you make good ramen at home, and is it worth the effort?

Use your noodle: DIY ramen is a no-brainer if you've got the time

2 mins

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The Guardian Weekly Newspaper Description:

EditorGuardian News & Media

CategoríaNewspaper

IdiomaEnglish

FrecuenciaWeekly

The Guardian Weekly is an international English-language news magazine based in London, UK. It is one of the world's oldest international news publications and has readers in more than 170 countries.

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