No port of call: coronavirus may sink the cruise industry

No port of call: coronavirus may sink the cruise industry

Cruise ships had been enjoying a golden era—until covid-19 came along. The pandemic has been a catastrophe for the industry. Stranded passengers have taken ill and even died, ships have been banned from ports, and revenue has collapsed. But lawmakers are unlikely to bail it out. In Sweden, daily life has been pretty normal, despite the coronavirus, but can that continue? And we report on Dutch disease—the language’s unusual affinity for poxy swear words.

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Episoder(1939)

The heat is on: COP26’s final hours

The heat is on: COP26’s final hours

The climate summit in Glasgow is in its last official day, but looks sure to overrun as negotiators thrash out an agreement. When the talking’s over, what will count as success? The rise of film franc...

12 Nov 202120min

Putin’s defiers: repression in Russia

Putin’s defiers: repression in Russia

As the economy has deteriorated and the internet has bypassed television, persecution of opponents has become the president’s main tool of political control. Even the pandemic has been harnessed to si...

11 Nov 202119min

Trouble at the border: Belarus and the EU

Trouble at the border: Belarus and the EU

Around 2,000 people from the Middle East are at the European Union’s eastern frontier. Alexander Lukashenko, the autocratic Belarusian president, promised them passage to the EU. They are pawns in a l...

10 Nov 202121min

Dream on: Biden and social mobility

Dream on: Biden and social mobility

Americans born at the bottom of the economic ladder find it harder than past generations—or their peers abroad—to climb to the top. The president has plans to change that. But he’s already having to s...

9 Nov 202120min

Control the past: rewriting Chinese history

Control the past: rewriting Chinese history

Over four days in Beijing, the political and military elite are meeting to recast the past. The revised version will depict Xi Jinping as a giant of the stature of Mao Zedong and Deng Xiaoping—and jus...

8 Nov 202120min

Tigrayans turn the tables: Ethiopia’s war

Tigrayans turn the tables: Ethiopia’s war

Few imagined when Ethiopia’s civil war began a year ago that the capital, Addis Ababa, would come under threat from Tigrayan rebels. We explain why the tide has turned. At this time of year, India’s d...

5 Nov 202122min

Covering the ground: trees and COP26

Covering the ground: trees and COP26

At the global climate summit, more than 100 countries have promised to end deforestation by 2030. Similar promises have been made before, but might this time be different? America’s Supreme Court dive...

4 Nov 202122min

Power failure: South Africa’s ANC stumbles

Power failure: South Africa’s ANC stumbles

For the first time since the end of white rule, South Africa’s governing African National Congress is set to win less than half the vote, albeit in local polls. We explain its slide in popularity. Aft...

3 Nov 202120min

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