
When the ‘World’s Cop’ drops the rulebook
The end of an order and the scramble for what’s next?

The end of an order and the scramble for what’s next?

THE NEW WORLD MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Iran on the Ropes’….
A president without decency or any interest in policy runs America like a TV show: gripping its audience with shocks, suspense and relentless action
It’s wildly overvalued, politically extreme and puts Trump first – but somehow has £1bn of deals to run Britain’s tech infrastructure
For decades, US survivalists have warned about a future with troops on the street and plain-clothes goons disappearing the White House’s enemies. Now it’s all happening under Trump, they are silent

THE NEW STATESMAN: The latest issue features ‘What Trump wants‘…
How Trump’s new global strategy will assert Washington’s hemispheric ambitions By John Bew
Jeremy Corbyn, Clare Short, Robert D Kaplan and others reflect on the consequences of the Caracas attack By Ailbhe Rea
By Megan Gibson

FOREIGN POLICY MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The World Minus One’ – The emergence of a post-American order.
Managing the global order with an antagonistic Washington. By Amitav Acharya
U.S. allies and partners are taking steps toward a post-American nuclear order.Rebecca Lissner, Erin D. Dumbacher
Beijing never bought the argument that reducing emissions would cause economic harm. Kelly Sims Gallagher
Allies fear that Washington is retreating from leadership at the worst possible time. Rishi Iyengar

FOREIGN AFFAIRS MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘How Strong Are The Strongmen?’
What Really Threatens Authoritarians? Stephen Kotkin
What Can Reverse Democratic Decline? By Steven Levitsky, Lucan A. Way, and Daniel Ziblatt
Authoritarian Cooperation Is Reshaping the Global Order by Nic Cheeseman, Matías Bianchi, and Jennifer Cyr
Beijing’s Strategy to Seize the New Frontiers of Power by Elizabeth Economy

THE NEW STATESMAN (June 18, 2025): The latest issue features ‘Books of the Year’…
We announce the New Statesman’s fiction and non-fiction books of the year By Tanjil Rashid
There is still much to discover from the great show of life
The author’s late style in The Eleventh Hour, his new collection of fiction, reveals a venerable writer displaced by timeBy Tanjil Rashid
America’s chaotic negotiations risk prolonging the chaos not ending it By Lawrence Freedman


by Joseph Torigian
In this prodigiously researched epic, Torigian details the life of Xi Zhongxun—the father of China’s current leader, Xi Jinping—to explain the history of the Chinese Communist Party. Along the way, readers gain a sense of how the younger Xi became the man he is today.


by Edward Luce
Luce, a gifted storyteller, chronicles the personal life and intellectual journey of former National Security Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, who played a significant but underappreciated role in opening the United States to China, bringing the Cold War to an end, and shaping the world that came after. In writing this gem of a book, Luce has rendered a genuine service to history.


by Irina Borogan and Andrei Soldatov
Soldatov and Borogon, two Russian journalists, tell the story of their one-time group of friends and colleagues—young Russians who, over the course of the Putin years, steadily drift toward nationalist and illiberal ideas and end up as supporters of Russia’s war in Ukraine.


by George Varouxakis
In this masterful study, Varouxakis tracks the meanings of “the West” from the late eighteenth century to the present—and argues that the modern notion of the term emerged in the 1830s as a way to distinguish western Europe from Russia. Today, for beleaguered countries such as Ukraine, “the West” is still a powerful idea.

FOREIGN AFFAIRS MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘The New Tools of Power’
And the End of Rising Powers by Michael Beckley
How to Build an Economic and Security Order That Works for America by Oren Cass
Fortress America Is Not a Safer America by Shannon K. O’Neil
An Old Tool Creating New Dangers Jason Bordoff and Meghan L. O’Sullivan