TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT – JUNE 13, 2025 PREVIEW

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TIMES LITERARY SUPPLEMENT: The latest issue features ‘Who won the war?’ We did, say the Americans, the British and the Russians. Each nation has a long history of claiming a unique role in defeating the Axis powers and diminishing the contribution of its allies. By Martin Ivens

Friends like these

The wartime alliances that could not survive the peace By Omer Bartov

Symmetry in motion

Capers and wallpaper: a new film from Wes Anderson By Keith Miller

You’re the tops

What Americans understand by greatness By Andrew Stark

Exploring the occult

A practical and literary guide to modern magic By Russell Williams

SCIENCE MAGAZINE – JUNE 13, 2025 RESEARCH PREVIEW

Science issue cover

SCIENCE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features the last male northern white rhino socializes with a southern white rhino. Since his death in 2018, the northern subspecies is functionally extinct after decades of illegal killing for their horns. A study from the Greater Kruger region of South Africa offers some hope for remaining rhino species, proving that dehorning operations can achieve poaching reductions under certain circumstances and in conjunction with other interventions.

How migrating marine megafauna tracks with conservation

Area-based conservation is not sufficient to protect the ocean’s most highly mobile species

Keeping in contact with lithium

Sodium in the lithium anode promotes fast discharge in a solid-state battery

Nanowires replace lost retinal cells

Tellurium nanowire networks could open up new avenues for artificial vision

THE NEW STATESMAN – JUNE 13, 2025 POLITICS PREVIEW

THE NEW STATESMAN: The latest issue features ‘What He Can’t Say’ – On the road with Kier Starmer…

Gaza diary: Amid the rubble

One family’s experience of life and death in the war zone. By Sondos Sabra

Laughing at the populist right is not a political strategy

The civil wars within Maga and Reform UK only show how dangerous they are. By Andrew Marr

What Keir Starmer can’t say

The Prime Minister believes he will heal Britain – but can he find the words ? By Tom McTague

Ideas for Keir

Tracey Emin, Jeremy Corbyn, Piers Morgan and others on what the Prime Minister should do next.

THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE – JUNE 14, 2025 PREVIEW

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THE ECONOMIST MAGAZINE (June 12, 2025): The latest issue features ‘American disorder’

When a radical performance artist has command of an army

Donald Trump’s troop deployment in LA could yet backfire

The world must escape the manufacturing delusion

Governments’ obsession with factories is built on myths—and will be self-defeating

How to curb organised crime without shredding civil rights

Ecuador is a test case in the fight against global gangs

THE NEW YORK TIMES – THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 2025

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Democrats Enter Risky Political Terrain as Protests Grip California

Scenes of unrest in Southern California, stoked by President Trump as he tries to deport more immigrants, have left Democratic leaders worried the confrontation elevates a losing issue for the party.

Suggesting More Troops in More Cities, Trump Bends Military’s Role

President Trump has expanded domestic use of the armed forces, testing the limits on involving troops at protests and the border.

Jury Convicts Weinstein in Second New York Sex Crimes Trial

The conviction, on a charge of first-degree criminal sexual act, was handed down in a mixed verdict that acquitted Harvey Weinstein of a second count of the same crime.

NATURE MAGAZINE – JUNE 12, 2025 RESEARCH PREVIEW

Volume 642 Issue 8067

NATURE MAGAZINE: The latest issue features ‘Picture Perfect’ – Oil painting restored using computer generated mask…

Solved: the mystery of the evaporating planet

An intimate look at a puffy exoplanet and its nearest star has revealed its tragic destiny.

Clever cockatoos learn an easy way to quench their thirst

Some birds master the fine art of manoeuvring beak, feet and body weight to turn on a tap.

CRISPR helps to show why a boy felt no pain

Mutation in an enzyme leads to resistance to chronic and acute pain, according to research in mice.

‘Missing’ air pollution is tracked to its ephemeral source

Discrepancy between models and measurements is resolved by peering into plumes emitted from power plants and other industrial facilities.

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY – JUNE 13, 2025 PREVIEW

THE GUARDIAN WEEKLY: The latest issue features ‘Flollowing The Amazon Defenders’ – A journey to the heart of the rainforest, three years after the deaths of Dom Phillips and Bruno Pereira…

It’s three years since the murders of the journalist Dom Phillips and the Indigenous activist Bruno Pereira, who were both killed on a visit to the remote Javari valley in the Brazilian Amazon.

Dom was a Guardian contributor based in Brazil, whose reporting often appeared in the Guardian Weekly. Last week his widow, Alessandra Sampaio, came to visit our London offices along with Beto Marubo, an Indigenous leader from the Brazilian Amazon.

From the other side of the world it’s easy to feel far removed from the activities of criminal gangs that threaten the Amazon’s Indigenous people and plunder its natural resources. But hearing Beto and Alessandra speak so powerfully about the impact of Dom and Bruno’s work reminded me why we need to stay focused on a region that defies easy scrutiny.

PROSPECT MAGAZINE – JULY 2025 POLITICS PREVIEW

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PROSPECT MAGAZINE: The latest issue features Daron Acemoglu reveals what tech bros won’t say about AI, while Peter Hoskin explains how gaming made the future. Plus, Neil Kinnock on Labour’s “paralytic caution”, Alona Ferber tours settler Jerusalem & Atul Dev on US universities’ capitulation to Trump

AI’s biggest secret: we can shape it

Artificial intelligence is poised to transform the world. Tech bros want it to subjugate us—but it doesn’t have to be that way

When students protested, Columbia capitulated

Atul Dev

The Englishman on a crusade to ban UNRWA

Alona Ferber

The strange death of the Rejoin campaign

THE NEW YORK TIMES – WEDNESDAY, JUNE 11, 2025

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Trump Declares Dubious Emergencies to Amass Power, Scholars Say

In disputes over protests, deportations and tariffs, the president has invoked statutes that may not provide him with the authority he claims.

In Trump’s ‘Patriotic’ Hiring Plan, Experts See a Politicized Federal Work Force

Political appointments inherently take into consideration loyalty to the president or the party. But expanding those types of questions to the career civil service is a significant departure.

Clock Ticks as U.S. and China Try to Undo Devastating Trade Curbs

Officials from the world’s largest economies will try to strike a deal Tuesday to relax painful export restrictions that they have imposed on each other.

CHICAGO BOOTH REVIEW – SUMMER 2025 PREVIEW

Chicago Booth Review Issue Cover | Summer 2025

CHICAGO BOOTH REVIEW (June 10, 2025): The Summer 2025 issue features how fintech is changing the financial system, whether monopsony is skewing the labor market, and the potential effects of Donald Trump’s economic policies.

Banking Is Getting Easier, but Is It Riskier?

Fintech may be generating unintended consequences for consumers and the industry.

Does Fintech Threaten the Stability of the Financial System?

Regulating new financial products and platforms requires understanding their risks and vulnerabilities.

How AI Can Make Smarter Predictions

Researchers gave AI a way to evaluate and calibrate its own uncertainty.

Are Employers Playing a Game of Monopsony?

Labor’s share of national income has fallen, and competition for workers may have something to do with it.

News, Views and Reviews For The Intellectually Curious