The World Unspun
The World Unspun
New Internationalist
New Internationalist's award-winning, in-depth journalism, now in a podcast!
How to stop the arms trade
While war and genocide means devastation for most, for the arms industry it means big business. While the arms trade is vast and secretive, there is a groundswell of people across the world taking action to challenge its power, from the gates of arms factories to our highest courts.In late April, at Palestine House in London, New Internationalist editors were joined by speakers at the frontlines of some of these movements to discuss how our governments and institutions are fuelling armed conflict and genocide around the world from Palestine to Sudan, what we can do about it and how to build international links in the process.Featuring speakers from Palestine Action, Peace Direct, Campaign Against Arms Trade and Global Legal Action Network.Read NI553: The Arms TradeThis podcast is part of our series How to stop the arms tradeHost: Maxine Betteridge-Moes LaceyCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer, Digital Editor), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-Editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial Assistant), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design), Thomas Barlow, Impress (Media Consultant)Speakers: Amy Hall (New Internationalist), Saeed Taji Farouky (Palestine Action), Maaz Salih Idres (Peace Direct), Katie Fallon (CAAT) and Charlotte Andrews-Briscoe (GLAN)Further Reading from this Episode:How to dismantle the deadly arms trade (Amy Hall, New Internationalist)Sudan’s warring generals are armed to the brink (Eiad Husham, New Internationalist)Partners in power: Israel, India and the arms trade (Mohammad Asif Khan, New Internationalist)No billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media. To help us continue, subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print or digital subscription.Sign up to Currents for dispatches from the frontlines of global progressive movements. 30 days FREE then £3/month.
May 12, 2025
1 hr 13 min
The World Unspun: A brand new podcast series from New Internationalist
Hosted by New Internationalist digital editor Maxine Betteridge-Moes. Every two weeks, we bring the pages of our award-winning print magazine to life through fascinating conversations with our global contributors.
May 8, 2025
1 min
Dig, Baby, Dig! Part 1: Peru
Eighty percent of the world is still powered by fossil fuels, but critical minerals are on the up.What exactly are critical minerals - and why all the hype?To mark the launch of our latest magazine, we’re digging deep. The first episode in this mini series takes you to Peru, where the government is determined to inflict an unpopular copper mine on the people of the Tambo Valley. Contributing editor Vanessa Baird shares what she learned from campaigners and activists about their growing resistance. Host: Maxine Betteridge-MoesGuest: Vanessa BairdCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer, Digital Editor), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-Editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial Assistant), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design)Read NI555: Dig, Baby, Dig! Can Critical Minerals Save the World? Further reading from this episode:Can mining save the world? (Vanessa Baird, New Internationalist)Hall of Infamy: Dina Boluarte (New Internationalist)Killing of protesters sparks early elections in Peru (Vaness Baird, New Internationalist)Peru’s anti-forest law rewards crime and screws the planet (Vanessa Baird, New Internationalist)Avoid Amazon by shopping at New Internationalist’s very own Ethical ShopSign up to Currents for dispatches from the frontlines of progressive movements. Sent straight to your inbox, twice a week. No billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media. Subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print and/or digital subscription.
Apr 29, 2025
24 min
Spycops: Britain's political policing scandal
For nearly half a century, the British police embedded agents within progressive political and protest movements; officers deceived activists into intimate relationships, sometimes fathering children, before vanishing from their lives forever. As the Undercover Policing Inquiry continues to unearth new abuses, New Internationalist co-editor Bethany Rielly speaks to two spycops campaigners about their search for justice.In this episode we also hear evidence given to the ongoing Undercover Policing Inquiry by ex-undercover officer Andy Coles, who is accused of having an intimate relationship with an animal rights activist known as ‘Jessica’ when she was 19 years old. Coles publicly denied the claims in the Peterborough Telegraph after he was unmasked in 2017, dismissing them as ‘lurid’. Despite this, in 2020, the Metropolitan Police upheld a complaint by Jessica, after launching an internal investigation which found ‘credible evidence’ about the alleged relationship. It said Coles would have faced a disciplinary hearing on a charge of gross misconduct if he had not already retired from the Metropolitan Police in 2013. On 18 and 19 December 2024, the ex-officer again refuted the allegations in oral evidence to the inquiry. Other female activists have also accused Coles of making sexual advances on them, which he also denied.Read NI546: Spying on dissentHosts: Maxine Betteridge-Moes & Bethany RiellyCredits: Paula Lacey (Editorial Assistant), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design)Credit for audio clips of hearings: The Undercover Policing Inquiry (UCPI)Guests: Tom Fowler, JessicaThe cop who spied on grief (Bethany Rielly, New Internationalist)Why Spycops victims walked out from the police inquiry (Campaign Opposing Police Surveillance, New Internationalist)Spycops Info (Undercover policing podcast hosted by Tom Fowler)
Apr 8, 2025
38 min
From Palestine to Western Sahara, the struggle is one. With Najla Mohamed-Lamin.
2025 marks 50 years since Morocco invaded Western Sahara, forcibly displacing the Sahrawi people into neighbouring Algeria. Women’s rights and climate activist Najla Mohamed-Lamin joins us from the Sahrawi refugee camps to talk about the multigenerational impact of 50 years of forced exile, and the common struggles of Indigenous peoples around the world.Read NI554: Treaty / NI545: Decolonize now / NI540: Take back the landHost: Maxine Betteridge-MoesCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer, Digital Editor), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-Editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial Assistant), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design)Guest: Najla Mohammed-LamineFurther reading from this episode:With all eyes on Gaza, Morocco strengthens its hold on Western Sahara (Maxine Betteridge-Moes, New Internationalist)Love Locked Up (Maxine Betteridge-Moes, New Internationalist)Spotlight: Aziza Brahim (Graeme Green, New Internationalist)A new dawn? Western Sahara and the Arab Spring (Jeremy Corbyn & Stefan Simanowitz, New Internationalist)War and Peace in Western Sahara (New Internationalist Issue #297) Subscribe to read in our digital archive.How Sahrawis See the Western Sahara Conflict (Najla Mohamed-Lamin, The National Interest)Support the Almasar Library CentreNo billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media. Donate today: a.nin.tl/2BSubscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print or digital subscription.
Mar 20, 2025
35 min
Truth and Treaty in Australia, with Aboriginal Senator Lidia Thorpe
Following the defeat of a 2023 referendum on an Indigenous advisory body to Australia's parliament, our latest issue scrutinizes the ongoing denial of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander sovereignty. In this episode, guest editor Zoe Holman talks about how she commissioned this Big Story and interviews Senator and Indigenous activist Lidia Thorpe about today's rallying call for Treaty.Help Rewire the World. Fund journalism that sparks change. Donate today at https://a.nin.tl/2BRead NI554: Indigenous Sovereignty in AustraliaHosts: Maxine Betteridge-Moes, Zoe HolmanCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer, Digital Editor), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-Editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial Assistant), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design)Guest: Zoe Holman, Senator Lidia ThorpeFurther Reading from this Episode:This is not your land (Zoe Holman, New Internationalist)Truth-telling in the Stolen Country (Zoe Holman, New Internationalist)Rise from this grave (Tony Birch, Overland)The last path forward to Treaty (Daniel James, 7am podcast)Subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print and/or digital subscription. Sign up to Currents, our subscribers' exclusive newsletter for dispatches from the frontlines of global progressive movements. Recent editions include stories on Rojava's civilian resistance and legal cases against weapons exports to Israel. 30 days FREE then £3/month. Learn more.
Mar 4, 2025
30 min
Why we must back the Kurds, and Syria's political future post-Assad, with Matt Broomfield and Leila Al-Shami
In the years since Syria’s civil war began in 2011, the country has been slowly drifting away from the mainstream media spotlight. But on 8 December, everything changed.Turkish-backed opposition forces declared Syria liberated from the 24-year rule of President Bashar al-Assad, capturing the capital Damascus in what seemed like the blink of an eye.So what does the future hold for religious and ethnic minorities in Syria? Will the Kurds realize their dream of self-governance under the defacto HTS authority? What remains of the country's political opposition and labour movements, and how can the international community support a fair and equal redistribution of power for Syrians?Matt Broomfield and Leila Al-Shami provide some answers.Guests: Leila Al-Shami and Matt BroomfieldHost: Maxine Betteridge-MoesCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial assistant), Samuel Raffnell-Williams (Theme music), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design)Further reading:The war isn't over (Matt Broomfield, in our forthcoming March/April 2025 issue - subscribe here)Where to now for Syria’s women? (Zaina Erhaim in New Internationalist)Riad al-Turk’s Lifelong Struggle for a Free and Democratic Syria (Leila Al-Shami in New Internationalist)Read NI 526 The Kurds: Betrayed again (New Internationalist, 2020)Start your 30 day FREE trial of Currents to receive bi-weekly dispatches from the frontlines of progressive movements.No billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media.Subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print or digital subscription.
Feb 11, 2025
35 min
Why the West picks guns over diplomacy, with Vijay Prashad
The West may be losing control over the world’s resources but it still dominates weapons systems and information. Vijay Prashad explains why some world leaders are effectively arms dealers and how this influences diplomacy.Read NI553: The Arms TradeHost: Maxine Betteridge-MoesCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer, Digital Editor), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-Editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial Assistant), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design), Thomas Barlow, Impress (Media Consultant)Guest: Vijay PrashadFurther Reading from this Episode:How to dismantle the deadly arms trade (Amy Hall, New Internationalist)Guns or Diplomacy? An interview with Vijay Prashad (Amy Hall, New Internationalist)Genocide in Gaza: Western Moral Collapse in the Age of Hyper-Imperialism (Palestine Deep Dive interview with Vijay Prashad)No billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media.Subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print or digital subscription.Sign up to Currents for dispatches from the frontlines of global progressive movements. 30 days FREE then £3/month. Learn more
Jan 14, 2025
33 min
Showing up for Palestine with Samar Alkhdour
For this week’s #TheWorldUnspun, we met with Samar Alkhdour, a Palestinian activist in Montreal whose campaign against the obstructive and discriminatory Canadian immigration system has been met with nothing but police repression and silence from the government.#NI554 Palestine: From Occupation to Uprising#NI546 Surveillance: Spying on DissentHost: Paula LaceyCredits: Paula Lacey (Producer, Editorial Assistant), Maxine Betteridge-Moes, Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-Editors), Samuel Rafanell-Williams (Sound Design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design), Thomas Barlow, Impress (Media Consultant)Guest: Samar AlkhdourFurther reading:How one Gazan mother’s tragedy has fuelled a sit-in action by Nelly Bassily (Disability Visibility Project)Long waits for Canadian visas leave Gazans in limbo by Anna Mehler Paperny (Reuters)Joint letter: Urgent changes needed to Canada’s Temporary Residence Visa Program for Gazans Amnesty International CanadaIntended to Fail: Systemic Anti-Palestinian Racism and Canada’s Gaza Temporary Resident Visa Program by Canadians for Justice and Peace in the Middle EastCoalition for No Over Policing Palestine/Police Pas la PalestineNo billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media.Subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print or digital subscription.
Dec 17, 2024
29 min
How Haiti became the 'poster child' for reparations, with Harold Isaac
Haiti, the land of the only successful slave uprising in history, was also an experiment in neocolonialism. As the country once again makes global news headlines for all the wrong reasons, we spoke to independent journalist Harold Isaac to better understand how Haiti's complex history of colonization, slavery and its crippling ‘independence debt’ to France contributed to the crisis we’re seeing play out on our screens today.Host: Maxine Betteridge-MoesCredits: Maxine Betteridge-Moes (Producer), Amy Hall, Bethany Rielly, Conrad Landin, Nick Dowson (Co-editors), Paula Lacey (Editorial assistant), Samuel Raffnell-Williams (Sound design), Nazik Hamza (Audio Editor), Mari Fouz (Logo Design), Thomas Barlow, Impress (Media consultant)Guest: Harold Isaac (@haroldisaac)Further reading from this episode:Held to ransom: Haiti's cycle of violence (Harold Isaac in New Internationalist)Country Profile: Haiti (New Internationalist)Haiti's Lost Billions (Lazaro Gamio etl a. in The New York Times)#NI554 Debt: Which way out?#NI545 Decolonize NowFor up-to-date and accurate reporting on the unfolding crisis in Haiti, Harold recommends following Jacqueline Charles (@jacquiecharles), Frantz Duval (@frantzduval) and Radio RFM (@maradiofm)No billionaires. No media moguls. No corporate ads. Just truly independent, co-operative media.Subscribe today and use the code THEWORLDUNSPUN for 20% off your first year of a print or digital subscription.
Nov 28, 2024
38 min
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