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)

Sub plot: the AUKUS alliance

Sub plot: the AUKUS alliance

The alliance between America, Britain and Australia has enormous significance, most of all for its nuclear-submarine provisions. We look at the global realignment it represents. The container-shipping...

17 Sep 202122min

Shake, rattle the roles: Britain’s cabinet reshuffle

Shake, rattle the roles: Britain’s cabinet reshuffle

Prime Minister Boris Johnson has re-allocated a number of key government posts. We ask how the changes reflect his political standing and what they mean for his agenda. A first-of-its-kind study that ...

16 Sep 202121min

Hunger gains: Afghanistan’s humanitarian crisis

Hunger gains: Afghanistan’s humanitarian crisis

Economic collapse and halting international aid following the Taliban’s takeover have compounded shortages that were already deepening; we examine the unfolding disaster. The verdict in a blockbuster ...

15 Sep 202120min

Percent of the governed: California’s recall vote

Percent of the governed: California’s recall vote

Governor Gavin Newsom is fighting off a bid to remove him that puts the world’s fifth-largest economy and, possibly, control of the Senate in play for Republicans. Russia’s exercises in Belarus are th...

14 Sep 202123min

Getting their vax up: America’s vaccine mandates

Getting their vax up: America’s vaccine mandates

President Joe Biden’s requirements for employers to insist on vaccinations are a bold move amid flatlining inoculation rates. But will they work? For decades the world’s cities seemed invincible, but ...

13 Sep 202120min

From the ground up: New York after 9/11

From the ground up: New York after 9/11

The horrors of 20 years ago spurred an ambitious transformation, not just at the site of the attacks but across the city’s five boroughs. We visit what has risen from the ashes. A growing body of acad...

10 Sep 202122min

Putsch back: Africa’s latest coup in Guinea

Putsch back: Africa’s latest coup in Guinea

It is unclear whether better governance lies ahead after a military takeover; what is certain is that Africa’s unwelcome trend of defenestrations has returned. We ask why. Justin Trudeau, Canada’s pri...

9 Sep 202122min

The call before the storm? Brazil’s protests

The call before the storm? Brazil’s protests

Tens of thousands of people aligned with President Jair Bolsonaro held protests—at his direction. Yet the numbers are increasingly aligned against him as he eyes next year’s elections. Conspiracy theo...

8 Sep 202121min

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