Registered user login:

23 October 2006

From the Editor…

sue-matthiasWelcome to the New Statesman website. Whether you are a new reader or an existing one - online or via the magazine - I hope you'll enjoy the great writing, fresh ideas and provocative debate that make the New Statesman Britain's award-winning current affairs weekly

Cover story

Why we must ration the future

You can't bargain with the planet because it doesn't care whether or not targets are "politically acceptable". So unless we secure a deal determining how much carbon each nation and each person can emit, we simply will not survive

Features

How ministers became soap stars

Reflecting on the book that is causing a political storm, Stephen Byers praises its author and calls on public servants past and present to debate ideas in the open

Legal highs: the new 'social tonics'?

Britain's drugs laws are in a mess, and into the confusion has stepped a new breed of drugs entrepreneurs who claim they have the answer: safe, substitute substances

Missing their marbles

As Greece puts the finishing touches to a building fit to hold the Parthenon sculptures, museums around the world are giving their fragments back. How much longer can the British Museum cling on to Lord Elgin's loot? Helena Smith reports

Britain's forgotten hero

How has it happened that the man who did more than any other to bring about the abolition of slavery is today without honour in his own country?

Regulars

"Oi, what's wiv the kiss in the text?"

Texting bores me: I can't be bothered with the twiddling or the false intimacies. But at least this keeps me out of danger

One minister who understands the problem

Ruth Kelly's wake-up call about Islamism to Britain's Muslims and British society at large is far more important than Jack Straw's opportunism over the veil

An abortion of human rights

Parenthood by piggyback

What history could teach my driver

The general puts the press in a spin

How would Max Hastings, press cheerleader for all things military, cope with Sir Richard? No problem. He yomped on regardless, bravely pocketing another cheque under heavy gunfire

It could have been me

Martin Bell on Nguyen Vu Binh
A Vietnamese cyber dissident is imprisoned by a government determined to control the internet
In association with Amnesty International

This England

Each printed entry will receive a £5 book token
Entries on a POSTCARD, please, to This England, NS, address at www.newstatesman.com/contactus.htm

A Dental Inquiry

Taken from the New Statesman archive, 18 June 1921
Caleb Saleeby (1878-1940) was a doctor, a Fabian and one of the best-known medical writers of his day, but at the insistence of the editor, Clifford Sharp, his many contributions to the New Statesman, including this one, appeared under the pseudonym "Lens". Sharp was apparently worried that Saleeby's name was too closely associated with particular causes he had espoused, notably eugenics. So far as teeth were concerned, however, Saleeby’s judgement appears to have been pretty sound.
Selected by Brian Cathcart

Julian's week

I don't wear a veil myself (unless you count Peter Mandelson's Christmas party . . . )

Portrait of the artist No 3951

Set by Didier d'Argent
Do our sports personalities need more accomplished ghost-writers?

Arts & Culture

Remaking history

South Africa's dynamic new museums are not just showcasing the past - they are reinventing the country's identity

Notes from underground

Daniel Trilling is delighted that the alternative press is booming - even in the age of the internet

Cabaret works its wicked way

Witches from Oz are no match for the sexy and sinister Kit Kat Klub
Wicked Apollo Victoria Theatre, London SW1
Cabaret Lyric Theatre, London W1

Never mind the Bastille, here's a sexy picture

Style and hedonism trump history in Sofia Coppola's flawed biopic
Marie Antoinette (12A)
dir: Sofia Coppola
I Saw Ben Barka Get Killed (12A)
dir: Serge Le Péron

We shall not see her like again

Helen Mirren's swansong as DS Tennison is deeply satisfying to watch
Prime Suspect: the final act ITV1

My Vanessa Feltz fixation

She is witty, warm and clever - and I'm not being ironic

National distrust

Heritage projects preserve buildings, but can neglect the people attached to them

Soccer scholars

Cultured passes, not rustic tackles, make the beautiful game

Hacked off by phishing frauds

We are right to fear internet crime. But we can protect ourselves

Bags of masculinity

Where to keep your iPod, keys, phone, diary, wallet? Annalisa Barbieri has just the thing for you, chaps

Wine: One for the road

With a motorbike mishap in France, Roger Scruton discovered a lesser-known white wine

Books

Give poetry back to people

It reminds us who we are, argues Neil Astley - but only if we shake off academic elitism and celebrate voices from our communities and around the world

Poetry special: Brilliant disguise

Translation shows us how poetry works - and reminds us why it matters.

Poetry special: Reports from the front line of language

New and unpublished poetry in the NS

Poetry special: Pump up the volume

Luke Wright argues that the best poetry, like music, only comes alive on stage

Poetry special: Become an expert

William Wootten chooses the best of this autumn's rich poetry crop

Ladies' knight

Casanova's Women
Judith Summers Bloomsbury, 368pp, £20
ISBN 0747577447

Rough justice

Asboville
Danny Rhodes Maia, 214pp, £8.99
ISBN 1904559220

Soap-opera revolution

The Lieutenant's Lover
Harry Bingham HarperCollins, 442pp, £6.99
ISBN 0007205511

Dirty pretty things

The Decadent Handbook
Edited by Rowan Pelling Dedalus, 372pp, £15
ISBN 1903517303

Poetry special

We mark the start of the 2006 Poetry International with a series of articles and look forward to next month’s Aldeburgh Festival by asking our readers to select their favourite poems.

Politics has been atomised

The Idea of India
Sunil Khilnani Penguin Books, 304pp, £10.99
ISBN 0141014261

Blair's first term in office

Servants of the People
Andrew Rawnsley Penguin Books, 592pp, £8.99
ISBN 0140278508

A recurring obsession

From the Diary of a Snail
Gunter Grass Harvest Books, 310pp, US$17
ISBN 0156339501

New Labour's tragic prophet

The Future of Socialism
Anthony Crosland Constable Books, 416pp, £9.99
ISBN 1845294858

Observations

Russia, 1956 and my dad

Observatons on communists

The new black

Observations on covering up

Keep that law out

Observations on privacy

Drawn out?

Observations on a comic marathon

Letters to the Editor

New Statesman readers give their views - see what they said and find out how to contribute yourself by going to our letters pages

Read the letters

Quick Access to

Vote!

Are your savings now safe?