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Guardian Weekly

Sep 23 2022
Magazine

The Guardian Weekly magazine is a round-up of the world news, opinion and long reads that have shaped the week. Inside, the past seven days' most memorable stories are reframed with striking photography and insightful companion pieces, all handpicked from The Guardian and The Observer.

Eyewitness Taiwan

A week in the life of the world 23 September 2022 • Queen is laid to rest, Russia’s war flaws and YouTube strangeness

Global report • Headlines from the last seven days

TRADE

The kingdom to come • Queen Elizabeth II was a political and diplomatic asset who spoke with the moral weight of the wartime generation. How will Britain face her loss?

OPINION • A very modern pilgrimage: in the queue with Waitrose bags, pizza and tired legs

PAKISTAN A climate warning for the world • Fears rise in border city that war will spill over from Ukraine

Fire power • Russian military looks good on paper, so why has it faltered?

UKRAINE • A distressing search for answers amid Izium’s mass graves

With Moscow seemingly on the back foot, others sense opportunity

ANALYSIS ITALY • Big brothers With Meloni, the far right anticipates its return to power

BRAZIL • ‘Hope is here’ Lula voters sing out for a heroic comeback

PAKISTAN

GERMANY • Now eagles can fly past windfarms high, and it’s thanks to AI

LEBANON • Forest force Lebanese and Syrians unite to take on wildfires

CHINA • The ‘hidden epidemics’ that could reshape a nation

JAPAN • Chateau Fukushima? Winery shakes off toxic image

MEDICAL RESEARCH Rack to the future: robot labs are here • At high-end labs in the US and UK, anybody, anywhere, can conduct experiments by remote control cheaply and efficiently. Is the rise of the robot researcher now inevitable?

UNITED STATES • No platform Republicans draw the curtain on TV debates

COMMON CAUSE? • SPECIAL REPORT: THE KING AND THE COMMONWEALTH

Canada • Ties to the crown are loosening but cutting them could be tall order

Kenya • ‘A brutal legacy’: Queen’s death met with anger as well as grief

Jamaica • A moment of reckoning as calls grow louder from republicans

India • ‘There hasn’t been closure’: the wait goes on for a British apology

New Zealand • Apathy – but little desire for change – as Charles’s reign begins

Australia • Albanese plays the long game and parks his desire for a republic

Double vision

Peter Pomerantsev • The west needs to take on Putin at his own information game

Gina Gustavsson • Perhaps we Swedes were never as liberal as everyone supposed

George Monbiot • Truss is preaching the discredited and toxic gospel of neoliberalism

Ministers who are out of step with the new King could be a Tory nightmare

Letters

Head of the family • She was tired of fame at 10. Now, as her fifth album is released, the daughter of Will and Jada is still learning to live in the spotlight

The genius who tore up cinema’s rule book • Jean-Luc Godard was the French New Wave’s inspired maverick, Lennon to Truffaut’s McCartney, and kept his radical imagination to the very end

Chasing pavements • On the streets of European cities, colourful mosaics are popping up where once there were cracks and potholes. It’s all thanks to street artist Ememem, France’s answer to Banksy

Reviews

POLITICS • Battle lines From Korea to Ukraine, a brilliantly illuminating study of the politics and personalities that drive modern conflicts

FICTION • Capital punishment Kate Atkinson’s witty ensemble tale brings the highs and lows of London’s criminal underworld between the wars vividly to...


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Formats

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Languages

English

The Guardian Weekly magazine is a round-up of the world news, opinion and long reads that have shaped the week. Inside, the past seven days' most memorable stories are reframed with striking photography and insightful companion pieces, all handpicked from The Guardian and The Observer.

Eyewitness Taiwan

A week in the life of the world 23 September 2022 • Queen is laid to rest, Russia’s war flaws and YouTube strangeness

Global report • Headlines from the last seven days

TRADE

The kingdom to come • Queen Elizabeth II was a political and diplomatic asset who spoke with the moral weight of the wartime generation. How will Britain face her loss?

OPINION • A very modern pilgrimage: in the queue with Waitrose bags, pizza and tired legs

PAKISTAN A climate warning for the world • Fears rise in border city that war will spill over from Ukraine

Fire power • Russian military looks good on paper, so why has it faltered?

UKRAINE • A distressing search for answers amid Izium’s mass graves

With Moscow seemingly on the back foot, others sense opportunity

ANALYSIS ITALY • Big brothers With Meloni, the far right anticipates its return to power

BRAZIL • ‘Hope is here’ Lula voters sing out for a heroic comeback

PAKISTAN

GERMANY • Now eagles can fly past windfarms high, and it’s thanks to AI

LEBANON • Forest force Lebanese and Syrians unite to take on wildfires

CHINA • The ‘hidden epidemics’ that could reshape a nation

JAPAN • Chateau Fukushima? Winery shakes off toxic image

MEDICAL RESEARCH Rack to the future: robot labs are here • At high-end labs in the US and UK, anybody, anywhere, can conduct experiments by remote control cheaply and efficiently. Is the rise of the robot researcher now inevitable?

UNITED STATES • No platform Republicans draw the curtain on TV debates

COMMON CAUSE? • SPECIAL REPORT: THE KING AND THE COMMONWEALTH

Canada • Ties to the crown are loosening but cutting them could be tall order

Kenya • ‘A brutal legacy’: Queen’s death met with anger as well as grief

Jamaica • A moment of reckoning as calls grow louder from republicans

India • ‘There hasn’t been closure’: the wait goes on for a British apology

New Zealand • Apathy – but little desire for change – as Charles’s reign begins

Australia • Albanese plays the long game and parks his desire for a republic

Double vision

Peter Pomerantsev • The west needs to take on Putin at his own information game

Gina Gustavsson • Perhaps we Swedes were never as liberal as everyone supposed

George Monbiot • Truss is preaching the discredited and toxic gospel of neoliberalism

Ministers who are out of step with the new King could be a Tory nightmare

Letters

Head of the family • She was tired of fame at 10. Now, as her fifth album is released, the daughter of Will and Jada is still learning to live in the spotlight

The genius who tore up cinema’s rule book • Jean-Luc Godard was the French New Wave’s inspired maverick, Lennon to Truffaut’s McCartney, and kept his radical imagination to the very end

Chasing pavements • On the streets of European cities, colourful mosaics are popping up where once there were cracks and potholes. It’s all thanks to street artist Ememem, France’s answer to Banksy

Reviews

POLITICS • Battle lines From Korea to Ukraine, a brilliantly illuminating study of the politics and personalities that drive modern conflicts

FICTION • Capital punishment Kate Atkinson’s witty ensemble tale brings the highs and lows of London’s criminal underworld between the wars vividly to...


Expand title description text