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紙版
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デジタル版
(8誌)
洋(海外)雑誌 ランキング
Forbes Asia
世界中のエグゼクティブに読まれている1917年創刊、米国有数の歴史を誇るビジネス誌Forbes(フォーブス)の姉妹誌。
有限会社インティリンクス
New Internationalist(ニューインターナショナリスト)英語版
2026年06月10日発売
目次:
THE BIG STORY
From 1926 to 2026: Bethany Rielly and Decca Muldowney unpack the history of Britain’s only general strike, and why it still matters today.
‘The meek shall inherit the earth’: Edd Mustill re-examines the 1926 strike through an international lens.
Voices from the nine days of wonder: Forgotten voices from the 1926 strike
What stands between us and a general strike?: Decca Muldowney talks to labour lawyer Franck Magennis about the restrictions on the right to strike in Britain today.
A general strike by any other name: Kim Kelly examines the Minneapolis shutdown that forced back ICE operations, asking what it means to call it a general strike – and how the tactic is evolving today.
Reclaiming the collective: Argentinian president Javier Milei has launched a wholesale attack on workers. Josefina Salomón and Patricio A Cabezas report on the fight back.
Off the tracks: Britain’s railway unions look back at their role in the 1926 strike, and the lessons for union members today.
Strikes that shook the world: Dispatches from the frontlines of mass strikes.
CURRENTS
Migrant workers in Lebanon face bombardment: Paul Hefel-James
Fallout of Iran war reaches Jordan: Yamuna Matheswaran
Internet apartheid emerges in Iran: Rebecca Ruth Gould
Cyprus says no to Britain’s bases: Futura d’Aprile
Vulture funds sue Ethiopia: Tim Jones
Solidarity flotilla delivers aid to Cuba: Maxine Betteridge-Moes
REGULARS
Letter From: Ramallah: Growing homelessness in the West Bank reflects something deeper than poverty, Mariam Barghouti writes.
Southern Exposure: Pham Văn Ty captures a stunning shot of children leaping into the Lap An lagoon, Vietnam.
Country Profile: Colombia
The Interview: Lisa Mean-Environmental activist Lisa Mean speaks to Magdaléna Rojo about the young people taking on Cambodia’s most powerful.
Temperature Check: Danny Chivers on how cities are saying no to fossil-fuel advertising.
Hall of Infamy: The Board of Peace: Tony Blair is back, doing what he does best: propping up the US’s imperialist ambitions.
Agony Uncle: Who has the right to make political posts on social media? Our Agony Uncle weighs in.
View from India: As climate change bites in the Himalayas, Tarushi Aswani argues that politicians are putting construction above people.
View from Africa: Tech companies need to be held to account for the abusive sexualization of women online, writes Rosebell Kagumire.
View from Brazil: As elections approach, the length of the working week is on the ballot, writes Leonardo Sakamoto.
FEATURES
Reza Pahlavi: Legitimacy cannot be televised: The Iranian monarch’s son Reza Pahlavi is not a credible alternative to the Iranian regime, argues Peiman Salehi
Who really runs Brazil?: As a defiant president Lula asserts power in Brazil, Juliano Fiori questions the limits of state power.
Surviving Sudan’s ‘man-made’ famine: Sophie Neiman and Guy Peterson report on how starvation is being used as a weapon in Sudan’s war.
The Long Read: Merthyr rises once again: Why is the far right gaining ground in the South Wales Valleys, once a hub of radical left politics and trade unionism? Maxine Betteridge-Moes, Bethany Rielly and Lydia Godden investigate.
見過ごせないローカルな事象からグローバルな動きまで、地球の明日に影響する出来事を独自の切り口で報道
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2026/04/10
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2026/02/10
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2025/12/10
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2025/10/10
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2025/08/10
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2025/06/10
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