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A young Pole wearing clothes with nationalistic symbols burns a flare in front of the National Stadium in Warsaw during the anti-migrant March of Independence in November 2015. Photo: Dominik Sipiński

A rightwing spiral

Dominik Sipiński reports on the rise of a nationalist Poland.

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 Photo: Gary Dublanko/Alamy

Green machines

Diana Beresford-Kroeger unveils the hidden bio-chemistry of trees.

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Don’t even think about it: a sign in Mondulkiri province in eastern Cambodia warns against illegal logging.  Photo: Bjorn Svensson/Alamy

Logging louts

Forest communities are under siege in Cambodia, says Fran Lambrick.

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Forest facts

Forest facts

Facts and figures about trees and forests, from carbon control to biodiversity.

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Ugandan cattle herder Lawrence Kamonyo and his wife, flanked by rows of pine trees planted by the German company Global Woods. The wood is certified but Kamonyo lost his land and his livelihood.  Photo: Susan Götze

Certified nonsense

Sustainable forestry may be an oxymoron. Chris Lang finds some holes in the system.

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A group of women enter the bamboo forest garden at Hokokuji Temple in Kamakura, Japan.  Photo: Roni Bintang/Reuters

Forest bathing

Escaping the pressures of modern life in Japan. By Tina Burrett and Christopher Simons.

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Young girls protect themselves from thick smoke as forest fires swept across Sumatra and Borneo in September 2015. The fires are set to clear the jungle to plant oil palms.  Photo: Sijori Images/ZUMA Wire/Alamy

A burning problem

It happens every year: thousands of hectares of Indonesian rainforest are torched to clear land for palm oil, timber and other agribusiness operations. It’s a perfect storm of destruction. Nithin Coca reports from Sumatra.

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Stumped: a young boy surveys the remains of giant conifers on a mist-shrouded inlet in the US Pacific northwest. RooM the Agency/Alamy

Last stand

The world’s last great woodlands are fast disappearing – with untold consequences for the environment and for us. Time to stop the destruction, argues Wayne Ellwood.

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Deacon Elineide Ferreira de Oliveira who runs a safe house in Brazil. Photo: Christian Aid / Tom Price

Faith and Gender Justice

It’s clear that we will not achieve gender equality unless we work positively with faith communities, including with men and boys, writes Helen Dennis.

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Are US politicians serious about tackling corruption?

In this month’s podcast, our friends at the Tax Justice Network ask ‘is the US president really serious about tackling corruption in the finance sector?’

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 Photo: Rochelle Hartman under a Creative Commons Licence

‘Acts of solidarity are what make us human’

Though facing overwhelming struggles of their own, teachers at the NUT conference in Brighton have been showing a true spirit of internationalism, writes Jo Lateu.

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A dalit manual scavenging. Photo: Dalit Network under a Creative Commons Licence

Drowning in liquid filth – in 21st century India

We pretend that people are not condemned to the caste system, Mari Marcel Thekaekara writes.

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Gathering at the Bourse, in honour of victims of terrorism, Brussels 23 March 2016. Photo: Valentina Calà

The Brussels Attacks

Our pain and rage are immense, but we need reason and understanding more than ever, Frank Barat writes.

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UN staff have been expelled from MINURSO's headquarters in Laayoune. Photo: Guillaume Galdrat

With no UN to watch, Saharawis fear Moroccan regime

Local activists are expecting a brutal crackdown from the police, writes John Richards.

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 Photo: Pedro Szekely

Calculating the environmental benefits of peace in Colombia

The costs of the 50-year conflict add up to ecocide. Doug Weir reports.

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Search results in a table:

Article title Description Author Published Magazine Link
A rightwing spiral

Dominik Sipiński reports on the rise of a nationalist Poland.

Dominik Sipinski April, 2016 491 Read
Green machines

Diana Beresford-Kroeger unveils the hidden bio-chemistry of trees.

Diana Beresford-Kroeger April, 2016 491 Read
Logging louts

Forest communities are under siege in Cambodia, says Fran Lambrick.

Fran Lambrick April, 2016 491 Read
Forest facts

Facts and figures about trees and forests, from carbon control to biodiversity.

Wayne Ellwood April, 2016 491 Read
Certified nonsense

Sustainable forestry may be an oxymoron. Chris Lang finds some holes in the system.

Chris Lang April, 2016 491 Read
Forest bathing

Escaping the pressures of modern life in Japan. By Tina Burrett and Christopher Simons.

Tina Burrett April, 2016 491 Read
A burning problem

It happens every year: thousands of hectares of Indonesian rainforest are torched to clear land for palm oil, timber and other agribusiness operations. It’s a perfect storm of destruction. Nithin Coca reports from Sumatra.

Nithin Coca April, 2016 491 Read
Last stand

The world’s last great woodlands are fast disappearing – with untold consequences for the environment and for us. Time to stop the destruction, argues Wayne Ellwood.

Wayne Ellwood April, 2016 491 Read
Faith and Gender Justice

It’s clear that we will not achieve gender equality unless we work positively with faith communities, including with men and boys, writes Helen Dennis.

Helen Dennis March, 2016 490 Read
Are US politicians serious about tackling corruption?

In this month’s podcast, our friends at the Tax Justice Network ask ‘is the US president really serious about tackling corruption in the finance sector?’

Naomi Fowler March, 2016 490 Read
‘Acts of solidarity are what make us human’

Though facing overwhelming struggles of their own, teachers at the NUT conference in Brighton have been showing a true spirit of internationalism, writes Jo Lateu.

Jo Lateu March, 2016 490 Read
Drowning in liquid filth – in 21st century India

We pretend that people are not condemned to the caste system, Mari Marcel Thekaekara writes.

Mari Marcel Thekaekara March, 2016 490 Read
The Brussels Attacks

Our pain and rage are immense, but we need reason and understanding more than ever, Frank Barat writes.

Frank Barat March, 2016 490 Read
With no UN to watch, Saharawis fear Moroccan regime

Local activists are expecting a brutal crackdown from the police, writes John Richards.

John Richards March, 2016 490 Read
Calculating the environmental benefits of peace in Colombia

The costs of the 50-year conflict add up to ecocide. Doug Weir reports.

Doug Weir March, 2016 490 Read