Contents
Issue 7, 2019
Ghost towns: how Britain's fading high streets kill local communities
Hephzibah Anderson / June 13, 2019
As shops shutter, it is not only local economies but the sense of place and community...
How Virat Kohli became one of the most powerful men in India
Philip Collins / June 12, 2019
India's cricket captain is the very model of a modern, newly-assertive and economically...
Mind your language-communicating the climate problem
Alice Bell / June 12, 2019
Language isn't everything but finding the right vocabulary is important
How flawed race science influences our doctors
Angela Saini / June 10, 2019
You want your doctor to treat you as an individual. But clinical practice is warped by...
How to save the planet
Ed Miliband / June 10, 2019
Solving climate change needn't wreck the economy. In fact, it's the smartest way to fix it
The lonely prosecutor
Jack Losh / June 8, 2019
A small, landlocked nation, the Central African Republic has been blighted by a...
Opinions
A snap poll and Syriza on the slide - what next for Greek politics?
Daniel Howden / June 12, 2019
Don't count on a return to the sensible centre. Daniel Howden reports from Athens ahead...
Policy report: Making tech work for the NHS
Steve Bloomfield / June 11, 2019
Smart medicine will save lives- but not money
Tory leadership race: A new broom in No 10 represents change-but not hope
Alex Massie / June 11, 2019
There is no leader currently in view who can heal Britain's state of anguished crisis
Tech in the NHS - A new way to reach vulnerable patients
Jon Ashworth / June 11, 2019
Seize the opportunity to widen access
Tech in the NHS - get ready for a digital revolution
Jennifer Dixon / June 11, 2019
Technology could transform the health service-are policymakers ready?
Economics and investment: Japan enters a new era
Duncan Weldon / June 10, 2019
The country was once synonymous with stagnation but today it is in a better place
Economics and investment: The power of timing - and luck
Andy Davis / June 10, 2019
A well-worn investment adage has its limits
Our sprawling constitution works better than you think
David Allen Green / June 10, 2019
A constitution should regulate conflict between different parts of the state-and in the...
The two-party system is dysfunctional, outdated - but worth hanging on to
Eliane Glaser / June 9, 2019
The alternatives look shiny and spontaneous but they're oligarchy in disguise
Britain's national genius lay in moderation - now we risk losing our heads
Rory Stewart / June 7, 2019
We never needed a formal constitution to guard against extremism - but if we continue...
"No one could take the memories": the forgotten story of how Fifa suppressed women's football
Gemma Clarke / June 7, 2019
Football's governing body, Fifa, wants us to believe that women's football has never...
Regulars
Elif Shafak: "I am huge fan of Gothic metal"
Prospect Team / June 13, 2019
The writer on her memories of childhood, the fight against populism-and why she writes...
The Prospect editorial: Climate change - local difficulties and planet-sized problems
Tom Clark / June 13, 2019
Global warming is not the kind of phenomenon that the human mind has evolved to regard as...
Should we pursue boundless economic growth?
John Browne, Jason Hickel / June 12, 2019
Is growth the source of our climate crisis or the means to fixing it? Two contributors go...
Prospect puzzle and crossword: July 2019
Prospect Team / June 10, 2019
The astonishing rise of Esports - in numbers
Chris Tilbury / June 8, 2019
Millions of people watch the finals of video games sports tournaments - and the money...
Hannah Berry's cartoon: The smallest act
Hannah Berry / June 5, 2019
Stephen Collins's cartoon: The Eco3000
Stephen Collins / June 5, 2019
Science and Technology
Who owns your liver? How a new capitalism is taking aim at our private lives
Joanna Kavenna / June 7, 2019
The surveillance capitalism of today's tech giants has radically reshaped what it means...
Arts & Books
Elif Shafak: "I am huge fan of Gothic metal"
Prospect Team / June 13, 2019
The writer on her memories of childhood, the fight against populism - and why she writes...
Richard Herring, probably the best comedy interviewer going
The best podcasts in July 2019 - Against the Rules with Michael Lewis and Richard Herring
Charlotte Runcie / June 12, 2019
Plus Awake at Night by the UN Refugee Agency
Flying home: a pigeon
The wonderful world of pigeon fancying
Cal Flyn / June 12, 2019
A new memoir is endlessly interesting and dazzlingly erudite
"He was going to live forever, or die in the attempt":: Christopher Abbott in Catch-22
The best television in July 2019 - Catch-22 and Dark Mon£y
Chris Harvey / June 12, 2019
Plus APOLLO: Missions to the Moon & Moon Landing Live
Brexit Party leader Nigel Farage
Think Brexit is a bad idea? It's even worse than you think
Will Hutton / June 12, 2019
A cautionary new collection of essays argues that Brexit will inevitably damage us
Laia Costa in Only You
The best films in July 2019 - Varda and Only You
Wendy Ide / June 11, 2019
Plus The Brink
Clive James on saving figure skating - and why poet Les Murray should have won the Nobel
Clive James / June 11, 2019
When I first read Les Murray's poetry, an unfamiliar feeling of humility overwhelmed me
Benjamin Britten's Noye's Flood
The best opera and classical in July 2019 - the Proms and Noye's Fludde
Alexandra Coghlan / June 11, 2019
Plus Die Zauberflöte at Glyndebourne
Great Englishman: David Hume
Why philosophy should be a carnival, not a museum
Alex Dean / June 11, 2019
Jonathan Rée's new history turns philosophical history on its head
Bank of England
The man who should become the next Governor of the Bank of England
Howard Reed / June 11, 2019
David Blanchflower castigates economists for being divorced from reality
Peter Gynt at the National Theatre
The best theatre in July 2019 - Peter Gynt and Noises Off
Michael Coveney / June 10, 2019
Plus Vienna 1934-Munich 1938, A Family Album at Theatre Royal, Bath
A colander from Pompeii
The best art and exhibitions in July 2019 - Cindy Sherman and Last Supper in Pompeii
Emma Crichton-Miller / June 10, 2019
Plus Félix Vallotton at the Royal Academy
A smiling baby Wikimedia commons
Inside the secretive world of unborn babies
Zoe Apostolides / June 10, 2019
A new book combines medical memoir with interviews with doctors
Kate Moss attending the Met Gala in 2019 Jennifer Graylock/PA Wire
What Kate Moss can tell us about capitalism
Tom Clark / June 10, 2019
Paul Mason's new book argues there's a crisis around the corner
The diplomat who embodied the many sides of American optimism
Tom Fletcher / June 10, 2019
Diplomat Richard Holbrooke was at the heart of America's greatest foreign policy...
The hidden lives behind the Bauhaus movement
Keith Miller / June 9, 2019
Though often understood as a rigid cult of technocrats, the Bauhaus movement was a...
Who owns your liver? How a new capitalism is taking aim at our private lives
Joanna Kavenna / June 7, 2019
The surveillance capitalism of today's tech giants has radically reshaped what it means...
In scripture, we find not just religious thought and theory-but a challenge to how we read
Lucy Winkett / June 7, 2019
When it comes to reading religious texts, intellectual curiosity and reasoning can only...
Life
From Frankenstein's monster to Franz Kafka: vegetarians through history
Ian Irvine / June 13, 2019
- My food is not that of man; I do not destroy the lamb and the kid, to glut my...
What teaching has taught me
Cathy Rentzenbrink / June 13, 2019
It is a privilege to witness the transformation that happens when someone begins to...
Do Hermes couriers know about their classical links to the underworld?
Charlotte Higgins / June 10, 2019
Hermes, Trojan, Rubicon - for the Classically-minded, brand names can be a major source...
The world is full of animal communication we cannot detect
Cal Flyn / June 8, 2019
Outside the range of our senses, the animals around us chirrup, shimmer and moan
Yes, sport is character building - even when it's unpleasant
Benjamin Markovits / June 7, 2019
In sport the only thing that works is constant, relentless, completely excessive effort...
The pleasures - and pitfalls - of mixing business and family
Hephzibah Anderson / June 7, 2019
Work and family are the dominant, often warring, features of many lives, and there's an...
Personen: Clark, Tom
Leseror. Aufstellung: Englisch
Prospect 07/2019 : Think again. Think Prospect / Tom Clark. - London : Resolution Group, 2019. - 88 Seiten : Illustrationen ; 28 cm x 21 cm
ISSN 13595024 Heft : 5,95 GBP
Allgemeine Zeitungen und Zeitschriften - Signatur: Englisch - Zeitschriftenheft