Mary Dejevsky



Profile:
Full name: Mary Dejevsky

Area of interest: Writes on a wide range of subjects, including foreign affairs, British politics, social issues and the media

Journals/Organisation: The Independent

Email: [mailto:m.dejevsky@independent.co.uk m.dejevsky@independent.co.uk]

Personal website:

Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/author/mary-dejevsky | http://www.theguardian.com/profile/mary-dejevsky

Blog:

Representation:

Networks: http://uk.linkedin.com/pub/mary-dejevsky/91/7b/887



Biography:
About: One of the country’s most respected commentators on Russia, the EU and the US, Mary Dejevsky has worked as a foreign correspondent all over the world, including Washington, Paris and Moscow. She is a columnist at The Independent and a former chief leader writer for that paper. Also a regular contributor to The Guardian. She regularly appears on radio and television, and is a member of the advisory board to the School of Slavonic and east European Studies, University of London, and a former Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Buckingham

Education: Graduated in Modern Languages from Oxford University: Russian, German

Career: Spent a year in the then Soviet Union as British Council exchange student. Post-grad research on Russian-Chinese relations; BBC World Service (six years); The Times: leader writer on foreign affairs, Moscow bureau chief and correspondent, 1988/1992 (during perestroika); The Independent: Comment editor, 1992, Paris correspondent, 1995/1997, Washington bureau chief, 1997/2001, Diplomatic editor, 2001/2004, Chief leader writer, 2004-2012, columnist, 2013 - Current position/role: The Independent: Columnist (former Chief Leader Writer); The Guardian: regular contributor


 * also writes/has written for: The Spectator, The Tablet, Newsweek Europe and others

Other roles/Main role: Author

Other activities: A member of the Valdai Group - invited since 2004 to meet Russian leaders each autumn. A member of Chatham House, the leading British foreign affairs think-tank. Former honorary research fellow at the University of Buckingham. Contributed the introductory essay to The Britannica Guide to Russia (Constable Robinson, 2009). Member of the advisory board to the School of Slavonic and East European Studies, University of London.

Disclosures:

Viewpoints/Insight:

Broadcast media: regular appearances on British, US and Russian radio and TV

Video:

Controversy/Criticism:

Awards/Honours:

Scoops:

Other:



Books & Debate:

 * Russia: the essential guide to the nation, its people and culture OCLC 246894309, 2009 (introduction by Mary Dejevsky)

Latest work:

Speaking/Appearances:

Debate: 

The Independent:
Column name:

Remit/Info: International affairs (esp. Russia), the EU, the US; also UK politics and society

Section:

Role: Columnist

Pen-name:

Email: [mailto:m.dejevsky@independent.co.uk m.dejevsky@independent.co.uk]

Website: http://www.independent.co.uk/author/mary-dejevsky

Commissioning editor:

Day published: Varies

Regularity: Frequent

Column format:

Average length:



Articles: 2016

 * Instead of asking Russia to change its ‘bad behaviour’, America should try to understand it a little more - The prime cause of Russia’s aggrieved response to what it sees as Western encroachment is not innate Russian belligerence, but the experience of loss and the birth pangs of a post-Soviet national identity - 22nd December
 * The biggest loser from Donald Trump's presidency won't be Ukraine, it will be the UK - There was a time when the Brexiteers sought to offer reassurance by stressing that the “special relationship” with Washington would come back into its own. How does such comfort look now? - 16th December
 * It's not the leftist policies of Jeremy Corbyn which have aged badly – its the policies of the Blairites who oppose him - The Blairites' model of ideological flexibility and economic compromise just don't work in a world that has seen Brexit and the US election of Trump - 9th December
 * We have to accept that Assad will win in Syria – and the West should be ashamed of how we drew the conflict out - There will be claims, in the aftermath, that the anti-Assad opposition was betrayed by its Western backers, and accusations of 'appeasement' – but the truth is that the opposition to Assad was always too fractious to complete the task it set out to do - 2nd December
 * The era of the socialist experiment is over – but the nostalgia surrounding it is growing - Cuba was already changing before Castro’s death. The transfer of power to his brother eight years ago brought shorter speeches and tentative market reforms - 27th November
 * Theresa May is operating at the limits of her competence – her po-faced response to Trump and Farage underlined that - She faced down Boris Johnson over water cannons for London, and then had the Machiavellian bravado to appoint him Foreign Secretary. That seemed strategic, even if the cards haven't played out yet – but some of her other choices look shoddy and unencouraging - 25th November
 * Yes, Theresa May should give Nigel Farage a peerage – and he should abandon his outdated maverick stance and accept it - He is a true character, the likes of which the upper house needs more of. The robes would befit him. He would look and sound the part. Even if he – eventually – ceases to lead Ukip, he should not be lost to public life - 18th November
 * What we are seeing in Donald Trump and Brexit is a peaceful revolution towards the far right across the West - Could it be that this is how revolutions happen in modern industrialised democracies? Are we watching, in fact, a popular revolt by other means: peaceful and through the ballot box, courtesy of universal franchise? - 11th November
 * Don’t panic about President Trump – there are reasons to be optimistic, especially where Russia is concerned - What he said during the campaign about dealing with Putin suggests that he will be a foreign policy realist, and not just with Russia. His aversion to involvement in foreign wars that have no direct relation to US national security suggests the same thing - 10th Novembery of universal franchise? - 9th November
 * Donald Trump's foreign policy ideas aren't as crazy as they seem – and could work out well if he wins the presidency - At a time of widespread popular disenchantment with the mistakes made by traditional politicians, an argument can be made for at least trying a different approach - 4th November
 * Tensions are rising between Russia and the West – and the UK must accept its responsibility - Is it any wonder that Russia is boosting its air defences in Kaliningrad? They see the Western moves as aggressive and theirs as defensive. We see it the other way round - 28th October
 * The biggest benefit of Brexit might be the economic hit we take - If the City of London were to take a hit and the economy were to suffer as a result – which, as a Remainer and a Europhile, I tend to think it will – there is an argument to be made that the UK would actually be all the healthier for it - 30th September
 * After the unravelling of the Syrian ceasefire can the US and Russia ever get along? - Any settlement in Syria will probably look more like the Russian version (with a weakened Assad) than the Western version (without him). This has nothing in common with the era of the Cold War; far more with the shifting sands of the Middle East today - 23rd September
 * At the first EU summit held without us, the UK’s views don’t count – and we’d better get used to it - The Bratislava summit is where the reality of Brexit will be driven home, but the arguments playing out across Britain are echoing across Europe too - 15th September
 * Theresa May is right, we need more selective schooling – the brightest have suffered for long enough - It is perverse in the extreme to encourage school diversity and choice to the point of allowing pretty much anyone to set up a new 'free' school, then to allow selection on all sorts of criteria – sports, music – but to ban absolutely the most basic selection of all: by academic ability - 9th September
 * Why the rise in post-Brexit nationalism could have unexpected benefits - Whatever happens next in terms of structures and international arrangements, the UK’s detachment from the EU could usher in a period of cultural rebirth - 25th August
 * Donald Trump's fall proves that there is method to the madness of US election campaigns - What Donald Trump’s unpredicted rise and – current – fall already show, however, is something we Europeans tend to neglect. What looks to us like a mad electoral marathon that serves no one well and costs extortionate amounts of cash is not a bad test of presidential potential - 19th August
 * Banning Russia’s paralympians from Rio 2016 sends a terrible message about the rights of disabled people - Throughout the Soviet period, disabled people were largely banished. In Russian cities, even now, you see the elderly amputees being wheeled to a begging pitch on a trolley - 12th August
 * The French are dragging Christine Lagarde into court, while we watch Philip Green quite literally sail away in his yacht - Taxpayers could be subsidising pensions that the wealthy business owner should morally be picking up. Meanwhile, Low Cost Holidays customers will lose all their money, despite the company apparently selling vacations hours before it folded - 29th July
 * Why the IOC is right not to ban all Russian athletes from Rio 2016 - The Olympics are about individual performance, and always have been. To ban Russia risked traducing that ideal - 25th July
 * Jeremy Corbyn: Love him or hate him, at least the Labour leader represents actual opposition - The Iraq war was supported by both major parties in Parliament, as was sweeping deregulation, as - despite the Labour leader’s best efforts – was the Trident decision this week - 21st July
 * What does Theresa May mean for UK foreign policy? - There is an opening, now the EU issue is decided, if not to branch out, then to take stock and at do some tidying up - 13th July
 * The leadership vacuum following the Brexit vote shows the UK is not as stable as we like to think - The aftermath of the referendum has exposed weaknesses in our parliamentary system, our constitution and our democracy - 30th June
 * Boris Johnson is wrong about Brexit – it has stripped us of our global influence, as the Foreign Secretary admits - Our PM-in-waiting says leaving the European Union is a ‘glorious opportunity’. Perhaps he doesn’t realise our ‘fifth largest economy’ is actually 25th by per capita GDP - 25th June
 * If you believe the Remain camp, Putin is the bogeyman of Brexit - but it's not actually that simple - For years, the West has exaggerated Putin’s power and authority, by imposing a tsar analogy that does not fit. But in puffing him up as a threat, we serve his ends more than we serve ours - 22nd June
 * Why I'm In: As a European fundamentalist, I want the protection of the EU - I consider myself part of the European generation, our lives overshadowed at one remove by our parents’ experience of war - 20th June
 * No, the mood of British politics did not lead to the death of a valued MP - You may not like the shouting and barracking of Prime Minister's Questions, but that is how top-level politics in this country is done - 18th June
 * The world is on hold over the EU referendum. Why have we failed to notice? - The one place that seems to be exempt from the perilous sense of a future unknown is the UK - 17th June
 * No proper referendum debate? Come off it, Brexit is the biggest debate in British politics for decades - When senior government ministers joust in public about migration or sovereignty – we are watching the dissection of big questions that deserved open discussion long ago - 10th June
 * Vladimir Putin is not ready to toast Brexit - If the EU fails, the potential continental contagion would not spare Russia - 3rd June (in the Financial Times)
 * Keeping a slave workforce or pioneering a council house scam? According to our justice system, that's no big deal - What is needed – for so-called white-collar crime at least – is a more imaginative approach to repayment in the broadest sense. How about dispatching the exploitative Batley boss for a spell of hard labour in Hungary? - 2nd June
 * Keeping a slave workforce or pioneering a council house scam? According to our justice system, that's no big deal - What is needed – for so-called white-collar crime at least – is a more imaginative approach to repayment in the broadest sense. How about dispatching the exploitative Batley boss for a spell of hard labour in Hungary? - 1st June
 * A European army is exactly what the EU and UK needs - Whether or not Donald Trump wins the US presidency, American sentiment is for the Europeans to do much more to help themselves - 27th May
 * EU migration rates are no problem for the UK – but you wouldn't know it by listening to the Brexiteers - One consequence of the new 'national living wage' may be not to make the UK an even more attractive destination for EU workers, but to price Britons into jobs they formerly rejected - 20th May
 * John Whittingdale has been kind to the BBC – it still needs reform - The impression has been created that, as with the NHS, a Conservative government is hell-bent on destroying a prized national institution - 13th May
 * The truth about Donald Trump? Most of his ideas are sensible – and a Trump presidency wouldn’t be so bad - Not only do none of his real positions sound outlandish, but most of them chime very well with the mid-point of American opinion - 6th May
 * Has Boris Johnson blown his chances of becoming PM by backing Brexit? - He seemed like a man who lived a charmed life until he gambled on Brexit being his route to the top job - 29th April
 * Nato and Russia are finally back in business with each other - and the diplomatic victory is Russia's - This week's meeting is also a victory for realism in foreign policy, on the part of east and west - 19th April
 * PFI was an expensive folly that crippled our public services, as Edinburgh's schools have discovered - The easy credit of the Blair years encouraged an ostentation and extravagance that no taxpayers in their right mind would have endorsed – and we're still paying for it today - 15th April
 * Donald Trump is right about one thing: Nato is obsolete - There are times when an iconoclast speaks a truth that others are unprepared to face, and this is one of them - 7th April
 * More than half of all shares in UK companies are in foreign hands. After Tata Steel, it's time to ask questions - While the US Congress halted a proposed sale of six ports to the UAE, many UK ports are foreign - non-EU - owned. And the capital's biggest airports are now all in foreign hands - 1st April
 * Pensions are not like any other benefit. We raid them at our peril - Pensioners have had a raw deal from the financial crisis, though a different raw deal from that suffered by those in work - 24th March
 * Why do we treat American nationalism as a harmless pageant? It's nothing of the sort - We treat US nationalism as harmless, even enviable, pageantry – until it comes to Trump - 17th March
 * Turkey’s EU deal on migrants requires force. Is that what we want? - Once, force might have been used out of media sight. But mobile phones have changed all that - 9th March
 * Clinton vs Trump is not the race Hillary would have chosen - The US of the European mind tends to be more generous, less rugged, and more outward-looking than much of it is - 3rd March
 * The final offer made to junior doctors was too generous – they should stop striking and get on with it - Why should it be such a struggle to get the emergency services to run 24/7? It is here that overtime culture has proved most resilient - 25th February
 * David Cameron is a Euro-savvy leader, but that won't mean much when it comes to the Brexit vote - The referendum is about the small-minded grievance that Britons were never asked what they thought about Europe - 18th February
 * Clinton is yesterday's woman, though the race is far from run - Trump-Sanders – well, that is hard to imagine even now, but it would have the sports stadium rallies packed coast to coast - 11th February
 * The age of deference to doctors and elites is over. Good riddance - Slef-interested diligence can help to point a GP in the right direction. Not everyone's a hypochondriac - 4th February
 * Granting a home to refugee children is not as simple as it sounds - Consider the perverse incentives - 29th January
 * The case of Litvinenko is certainly damning - but here's why it won't put an end to UK-Russia relations - With the spotlight so narrowly on Litvinenko and his death, there was no room for any real consideration, or even curiosity - at least none that reached the public domain - about how the polonium arrived in the UK - 21st January
 * Obama’s legacy will be much greater than it now appears - It is in US foreign policy where President Obama will come to be recognised as a game-changer - 14th January



Articles: 2015

 * Why Isis won't actually be the huge threat of 2016 - If Isis cannot keep order, if it cannot delegate power when it moves on, then its authority may wane - 31st December
 * Good news: 2015 was the year lessons were - finally - learned - David Cameron has been a bit of a star in the learning department; so much for the cliché of Old Etonian arrogance - 24th December
 * The icy relationship between the UK and Russia is thawing - It is an unfortunate comment on UK-Russia relations that we have to resort to space flight and ballet - 17th December
 * This is democracy – Marine Le Pen deserves the test of French power - Personally, I was surprised the Front National did not do better - 10th December
 * Work with Russia in Syria and we may see rewards in Ukraine - Russian airmen inscribing ‘For Paris’ on a bomb was a plea to be accepted as part of the team - 26th November
 * PMQs: Corbyn doesn't need to prove that Cameron is all talk when the PM does it so easily for him - Cameron said he spends every penny with taxpayers in mind. But then, as Corbyn asked a question from ‘John’, the Tory benches erupted with laughter and mockery. Clearly it only took them seconds to forget those taxpayers who are supposedly constantly on every Conservative politician’s mind - 19th November
 * Those in favour of a Brexit don't seek 'Rule Britannia' - they have a different way of thinking - The greatest threat to the EU is not Russia, and not the meltdown in Syria and the Middle East, but the possibility of Britain leaving - 13th November
 * Justin Trudeau’s handsome victory could set the tone for Jeremy Corbyn - Over the next four years Canada has the chance to become a test bed for key parts of what Corbyn represents - 23rd October
 * When junior doctors say it's not about the money, they're lying - They say that they will have to wait to buy a house, as though they are uniquely entitled to own a home in their 20s  - 9th October
 * The West should hear Putin out as he speaks to the UN - There has been suggestion that Putin could reverse track and present the outline of a new ‘grand bargain’ - 25th September
 * The refugee crisis is more of a threat to new Europe - And if this Europe wants the economic and security benefits afforded by the EU it will have to give, as well as take - 11th September
 * Most independent inquiries like Chilcot fail – we should give Parliament the job - Public inquiries are no more than a formalistic last resort, open to specious legal argument and manipulation - 28th August
 * As Barcelona has found, it’s possible for a city to have too many tourists - When they stop to commune with their selfie sticks, I don’t know whether to be proud or irritated - 13th August
 * Young people should stop complaining - it's the baby boomers who are really suffering - Enough of the sob stories about Generation Y: when you look at the facts, you see that older people in the UK have come out just as badly from the recession - 24th July
 * Tube drivers are an endangered species. The strike shows why - The strike provides a compelling argument for the introduction of driverless trains - 10th July
 * Ukraine’s tragedy casts a pall over the EU summit - It will not be a happy gathering in Riga. The mess in Ukraine and the Eastern Partnership constitutes a huge policy failure - 22nd May
 * The Trident whistle-blower and the SNP allow us to reconsider our nuclear deterrent - A first step might be the transfer of the submarine base from Scotland - 19th May
 * The considerable talents of Nick Clegg shouldn’t go to waste - Clegg comes across as affable, trustworthy and relaxed – a combination many official Britons find nigh-impossible to muster abroad - 14th May
 * We should give credit to Obama for bringing an end to America's foreign wars - We’ve seen a transition to a new, more enlightened way of engaging with abroad - 8th May
 * Once again, the West fails to understand Russia - Western leaders are staying away from this year’s Victory Day, which mourns the loss of 20 million Russians who died to defeat Nazi Germany - 5th May
 * The real victims of London's housing aren't the poor, but the squeezed middle - Callous though it sounds, it is rank extravagance to spend a lot of public money enabling jobless poor people to remain in expensive areas - 1st May
 * General Election 2015: E-voting, PR and other ways to shake up future elections - I know all the objections to such ideas, but the health of our democracy is too important for changes not to be made - 24th April
 * Russia’s Child 44 ban will surely backfire. But we should try to understand it - A key factor in banning the film is the reverence that Russians hold for marking victory over the Nazis. Kneejerk western comment fails to mention this - 17th April
 * Isn’t it time Europe was honest with itself about migrants? - We need to radically rethink our approach and do our best to save more lives - 17th April
 * Can someone please tell me where this election is happening? - Voters deserve better. For a start, it would be nice to know where the battle buses are actually going - 2nd April
 * One by one, the final remains of the British monarchy's power are being buried - Past and future kings are now where they should be – in the hands of the people - 27th March
 * Tunisia shooting: It was clear from my recent visit where the country's problems lay - Tunisia is stuck somewhere between a developed and developing country, with some of the worst features of both - 20th March
 * Public to private sector is OK for civil servants, so why not for MPs? - The recent vilification of MPs with second jobs has revealed a clear double standard - 5th March
 * After Savile, we must devote our energies to stopping the child abuse taking place now - Ongoing inquiries into decades-past events can only achieve so much - 27th February
 * Ukraine crisis: 'Catastrophic misreading' of Russia is the result of a Foreign Office denuded of regional experts - A report of 2012 questioned departmental restructuring in the 1990s that had favoured managerial skills over geographical and linguistic knowledge - 24th February
 * Ukraine crisis: Can the UK any longer aspire to a global role? - Would we not be better concentrating on the defence and well-being of our own backyard? - 20th February
 * Ukraine crisis: A deal that does not remove distrust but on which a political settlement depends - It is not just Russia’s good faith that will be tested but Poroshenko’s too - 13th February
 * The more the West sees the Ukraine crisis as another Cold War the worse it will get - The talk – especially coming out of the US – is increasingly disturbing - 6th February
 * Laying the blame for Litvinenko’s death at Putin’s door is an orthodoxy that needs challenging - There is far more to this saga, and it is already emerging from the inquiry - 30th January
 * What's Prince Andrew doing in Davos anyway? - His presence is a sign of the event’s degeneration - 23rd January
 * In a media age, the public will judge Cameron as ‘frit’ if he doesn’t debate - Voters deserve to see each political contender have their claims tested - 19th January
 * Times have changed – and Tony Blair is very much behind them - New Labour’s policies have reached the limit of their electoral acceptability - 2nd January



Articles: 2014

 * World leaders in their 30s? Change is in the air and we’d better get used to it - A new generation is shaking up the way politics is conducted - 27th December
 * This debate is much bigger than just wheelchairs v buggies - Disabled lifts are lifts on the cheap: they send a message that disabled people are different - 12th December
 * The key to Putin is not fearing his power but understanding his weakness - The Russian leader's supposed strength must be met with strength - 5th December
 * Who wouldn’t like a sharing economy? Well, me, for one - The spread of digital everything has propelled sharing to a whole new level - 28th November
 * The West loves to talk tough on Putin... with the cameras rolling - The difficulty is that both sides have painted themselves into corners - 21st November
 * If we're going to cry foul over Fifa, then we should at least hold our banks to the same standard - If politicians are so affronted by Fifa's latest report then why aren't they doing anything about our crooked banks? - 14th November
 * Nobody cared about the midterms — Where did all the British US-election nerds go? - There was a time when American politics seemed 'perfect', but now it's all gridlock - 7th November
 * The Ebola crisis is becoming an impossible situation - Political problems, quarantine questions, undeveloped vaccines that may not stem the tide: the global Ebola response is a mess - 30th October
 * To improve the NHS, it must stop being a political issue - Our NHS is stuck in 20th century, but new boss Simon Stevens may have what it takes to make it modern - 24th October
 * Redrawing borders is dangerous. But so is leaving them alone - Though few in number, stateless nations account for a degree of suffering and armed conflicts out of all proportion to their size - 18th October
 * What the final months of my mother’s life revealed about the NHS - Is the service showing sufficient care in the way it treats the information it has on patients? - 10th October
 * Will we ever find out what really happened in the case of Moazzam Begg? - I suspect that the intelligence services have been up to their old tricks again - 3rd October
 * Hong Kong protests: Why Beijing should be very worried indeed - Just because other democracy movements have failed doesn’t mean this one will - 30th September
 * Isis, we are told, is a ‘clear and dangerous threat to our way of life’. I’m sorry, but I just don’t buy it - It’s absurd to suggest that we are fighting them ‘over there’ so that we won’t have to fight them ‘over here’ - 26th September
 * Third-runway momentum is gathering. We need to stop it in its tracks - Noise and pollution are bad enough blights on Londoners as it is - 23rd September
 * London’s far too exclusive already, so don’t start charging people for the New Year’s Eve fireworks - It may seem like a sensible idea, but Boris Johnson's plan sets a worrying new precedent - 19th September
 * Merging social care services with the NHS makes sense - And anyone who is really in the business of serving the public will agree - 5th September
 * Ukraine crisis: A ceasefire suits both parties – but how long will it last? - The question is: is this more than a publicity stunt? - 4th September
 * How Nato should respond to this Russian ‘incursion’ - After stating from the outset that it will not be fighting for Ukraine, the priority will be to project unity and determination - 30th August
 * Grant asylum to migrants who arrive close to death – but don’t be surprised if it inspires more tragedies - The validity of asylum can't be decided by the deprivation endured en route - 23rd August
 * We wouldn't need to recall Parliament if it worked on the same schedule as the rest of us do - The inflexible tradition of annual recess isn't in keeping with the rest of the world - 18th August
 * Things might not be looking good for Alex Salmond, but Scotland needs its leader to fight until the end - Resentment will be greater if the Yes side feel that their leaders let them down - 25th July
 * It’s time for the Civil Service to start looking outwards - And a boss with business experience won’t hurt - 18th July
 * You didn’t have to be roadside in Yorkshire this week to realise that England is changing - There was a sense of identity and pride - the future is local - 10th July
 * The French ban on the niqab has been upheld. Quite right too - And perhaps it is time the British followed suit - 4th July
 * The Coulson affair has reinforced some of the more damaging misgivings about David Cameron’s leadership - Andy Coulson was an excellent media manager, but he did not deserve such loyalty - 27th June
 * David Cameron looks powerless on Europe. Can he salvage anything from Juncker-gate? - The stand-off has presented Britain, not for the first time, against almost everyone else - 20th June
 * Has the Foreign Office lost its voice? - Once we invaded at the drop of a hat, now Hague poses for pictures with film stars as Iraq goes up in flames - 12th June
 * The anachronism of the Queen’s Speech was never more apparent than when she started discussing plastic bags - Is no one capable of translating the Government’s language into something more queenly? - 5th June
 * Welcome to the age of post-interventionism - Military intervention in other countries is not the only way for America to show its strength - 30th May
 * The New York Times maybe needed Jill Abramson as editor more than she needed the job - As a woman reluctant to compromise, she may have found it harder to balance the demands and of the proprietor and those of the newsroom - 15th May
 * Jumping on the #bringbackourgirls bandwagon won't help Nigeria or stop Boko Haram - What about the crisis in Ukraine and the killings in Syria? The abduction of 200 girls in Nigeria really isn't the problem of Western leaders - 9th May
 * Crossing the Ukraine border makes little sense for Vladimir Putin's troops - With the war of words over the deaths in Ukraine’s port city of Odessa still raging, the focus of the conflict moved back to the town of Slovyansk, deep in eastern Ukraine - 7th May
 * David Cameron needs to tread very carefully when ‘doing God’, especially when it looks like a way of countering Ukip - The PM comes across as a thoroughly typical Anglican - a bit of this, a bit of that - 18th April
 * Ukraine crisis: Both sides in the conflict lay claim to the truth - It is all too easy to envisage civil war being triggered by mistake - 15th April
 * Does the EU’s involvement in Ukraine amount to a form of colonialism? - Brussels is playing a role in Kiev which must be open to question - 11th April
 * More than anti-EU, Nigel Farage is anti-establishment – and that’s where his real appeal lies - After these debates with Nick Clegg, the Ukip leader has to be taken seriously - 4th April
 * The silver-bullet solution to the Crimean crisis is clear: work together with Moscow, for our benefit and for that of Ukraine - The Western objection will be that Russia should not be rewarded for bad behaviour - 27th March
 * Macho world of men and motors has had its day - Time was when the only place you would find a woman at a motor show was trailed over the bonnet - 24th March
 * Crimea crisis: We're constantly spitting venom at Russia, but lack a bite to scare the Kremlin - Hague’s rhetoric is in direct proportion to the UK’s incapacity, or unwillingness, to act - 20th March
 * For Putin, sanctions could be a price worth paying in exchange for the Crimea - Is there a possibility that the voters could spring a surprise? A slender one - 16th March
 * Three cheers for the marriage tax break - Not because it rewards traditional relationships, because it means less child poverty - 13th March
 * Ukraine crisis: If we treat Vladimir Putin as a leader who wants to grab Russia’s empire back, we will be inviting him to do exactly that - A Cold War bogey of Putin and Putin’s Russia is lodged in Western minds - 7th March
 * Ukraine crisis: Nato ‘betrayal’ and Brussels rhetoric pushing Vladimir Putin to act - The Americans, Churchill supposedly said, could be relied upon to do the right thing, but only after they had exhausted all the alternatives - 3rd March
 * As a key suspect in the 1982 Hyde Park bombing walks free, it’s worth remembering what mediation between once sworn enemies really means - Seeing the world as others see it is a skill Britons have had less need to develop - 27th February
 * Divisions exist but a sense of Ukrainian national identity is still strong - It’s too simple to describe this crisis as a case of east vs west - 24th February
 * Fly-unders are the future - Bring on the 'fly-unders'. It’s the flawed plans that make us Nimbys - 21st February
 * No more US interventionism. No more Washington as the world’s policeman. What’s wrong with that? - The talk is of dangerous vacuums that malign forces will rush in to fill - 13th February
 * A farewell to Kevin Pietersen, and border-hopping sportsmen - Apparently the problem, if there was one, was that he was too good for us - 6th February
 * State of the Union: Obama’s not the only elected leader whose power is waning - Institutional flaws have held the President back - 30th January
 * Everyone loves John Lewis, especially the Government. But is its reputation justified? - I left, as so often, disorientated and empty-handed - 24th January
 * Valérie Trierweiler’s biggest mistake was to accept the outdated role of ‘first lady’ - Paradoxically, the demand for a figurehead hostess seems only to have grown - 16th January
 * There's no sense in querying the Mark Duggan jury - To accuse them of being illogical or stupid is to reject what a jury is for - 10th January
 * Richard Haass’s talks will not have failed if Britain accepts it must now get real on Northern Ireland - The Good Friday Agreement was not a prelude to greater integration - 3rd January



Articles: 2013

 * Putin’s charm offensive is about more than just the Sochi Winter Olympics - Russia wants and needs help with major modernisation, not just in the energy sector, but with all kinds of capital projects - 28th December
 * Lee Rigby murder: What do we mean by ‘radicalisation’? - After the conviction of Rigby's killers, it’s a term we need to apply carefully - 20th December
 * So the retired are living the life of Riley? Take a look at the true figures - Income of UK pensioners still lags far behind most of Europe - 14th December
 * If I were young and Scottish, I would vote yes to independence - The country is certainly strong enough to stand on its own - 29th November
 * The rise of Paul Flowers offers a textbook example of cronyism - He was sped to his position by indulgences typical in the British elite - 22nd November
 * We are ruled by an ‘out-of-touch, moneyed elite’. But their advantages might actually help - The seriously wealthy may be less vulnerable to either flattery or mega-bucks - 15th November
 * Drivers, don’t be bashful about national stereotyping – it saves lives - A Dutch car will be stolidly law-abiding; a British driver’s main fault abroad is timidity - 8th November
 * Drivers, don’t be bashful about national stereotyping – it saves lives - A Dutch car will be stolidly law-abiding; a British driver’s main fault abroad is timidity - 8th November
 * Old-fashioned diplomacy is back, but it is already out of time - Diplomatic mechanisms may not be able to address the worst global problems - 27th September
 * If even Merkel attracts ‘black widow spider’ sexism, what hope is there for the rest of us? - Merkel was compared to the creature - but would such a comparison have been made in the case of a male politician? - 26th September
 * A stunning victory – but Merkel will keep calm and carry on - It's unlikely the Chancellor will throw caution to the wind in her third-term - 24th September
 * One health check, two locations, no doctor. Who really benefits? - The fact that this free over-40s health check doesn’t involve any actual doctor sends a certain message about how seriously it is taken by the health professionals -12th September
 * BBC bosses are all at sea in an ocean of self-regard - The cast of characters at this committee hearing could hardly have been bettered as a mini-portrait of those who reach the top of a certain part of our establishment - 9th September
 * Martin Luther King? Not an enemy in the world - Martin Luther King wasn’t just hoping for a world in which people were nicer, he was calling for a movement of millions that would force change in the system - 30th August
 * Stop whingeing about the crowds and start appreciating our tourists - Despite the crowds, the dearth of public toilets and the prices, London’s tourists came across as an overwhelmingly cheerful lot - 28th August
 * An uneasy election that is Angela Merkel’s to lose - The visit of the Chancellor to Dachau says a lot about her political strategy - 21st August
 * Buying a mobility scooter?  - Too many pitfalls face consumers who need help getting around. The Office of Fair Trading should square up to rogue sellers - 21st August
 * The West must finally see Egypt as it is, not as we would like it to be - The Western world cannot afford an Egypt mired in protracted disorder, but the unpredictability of its neighbourhood excludes the usual treatment - 16th August
 * Our sepia-tinted self-image is consoling, but it hinders NHS change more than anything else - In its organisation and buildings, it is stuck in several time-warps and only the philosophy – a universal service, free at the point of delivery – remains valid - 9th August
 * Gibraltar: This Rock stands in the way of our national interest - There is a case for summoning up our old colonial instincts to resolve this dispute - 7th August
 * Lessons from the short and tortured life of Daniel Pelka - Such extreme cases of child abuse conform to a pattern that the safety net fails to catch - 2nd August
 * Happiness index: Cheer up, you Chicken Lickens. Disaster isn’t just around the corner - The Olympics, unemployment and longer life expectancy: some indicators why we're slightly happier than last year - 31st July
 * Stop treating the state pension as a handout - It must be a comfort for the under-30s to believe that the pensioners of today are gobbling everything up and leaving nothing left over, but it flies in the face of the facts - 26th July
 * From blue-chip hacking to GlaxoSmithKline: Britain is far more corrupt than we think - Our belief in the probity of British companies does not match with the evidence - 24th July
 * Navalny's conviction isn't proof that Putin is too strong - rather it shows the opposition is too weak - But this case calls into question Putin's claim not to prosecute citizens for their politics - 19th July
 * Tate Britain: If you patronise Lowry, you patronise generations of urban Britons - The affection for Lowry has less to do with style, and much more to do with the familiarity of his subject matter to very many Britons of a certain age - 17th July
 * As paymasters, we get the MPs we deserve - On one point most people can agree; an almost 10 per cent rise for MPs when pay in the public sector is mostly frozen is awkward, to put it mildly - 12th july
 * Britain should not share its intelligence with the US - Hague ridiculed suggestions that GCHQ had circumvented UK laws by working with America. We would be wise not to take him at his word - 5th July
 * A luxury retirement sounds lovely, but please can we have affordable sheltered housing too? - The idea is billed as a response to the ageing demographic, the growing wealth of people over 55 and the trend for inner-city life among active “seniors” - 3rd July
 * Gillard, Bower, Shoesmith: Why can't a woman in public life be treated more like a man? - We may think the UK is far further down the line to gender equality than Australia - but our record with female leaders is itself far from exemplary - 27th June
 * Surgeons wearing jeans to work? I don't think so... - Plus: The Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe demonstrated his personal touch (and drilling skills) when I saw him give a speech in London - 25th June
 * Don't underestimate Obama and Merkel. These are serious leaders for perilous times - Their recent joint appearance at Brandenburg Gate in Berlin showed how much these two leaders have in common, but this introspection is often seen as dithering - 20th June
 * The Pergamon Museum offers a pointed message from Berlin to Russia – give our treasures back - 19th June
 * The Coalition gives Clegg a veto on arming Syria - Nick Clegg has suffered all manner of barbs about entering a colation, but the greatest vindication of his decision to take his party into government may still be to com - 13th June
 * Of course immigrants have the right to a family reunion, but don't expect others to pay for it - The born romantics among us may tell you otherwise, but family reunion is not a minor detail of the immigration debate. Nor does it come without a price tag - 12th June
 * Turkey protests: The forces that are reshaping the Middle East will reshape Turkey too - The Prime Minister has barely acknowledged their existence, while Turkey’s friends abroad have said more about what the protests were not, rather than what they were - 7th June
 * Customer satisfaction surveys? I’d give them nought out of 10 - 5th June
 * The battle for gay marriage is a civil war, not a religious one - The protests in France stem in part from a blurring of church and state - 31st May
 * Even with patriotic intentions and my credit card primed, I still couldn’t spend to save the economy - The rain was scything down all day, which meant that a sensible woman in possession of a major credit card must also be in want of a decent mac (and a dress with sleeves...) - 29th May
 * Woolwich: The resilience of the British public is a strength not to be squandered - Our slowness to panic is a social virtue that can compensate for a host of deficiencies''] -
 * And all I wanted to do was switch the lights on in my hotel room... - Those who spend all their waking hours refining hi-tech gadgetry can get so far ahead of the rest of us that they end up making our lives more complicated, not less - 22nd May
 * You won’t believe it, I know, but not everyone loves a Boris Bike - New Yorkers have greeted the arrival of a bike share scheme with suspicion - 8th May
 * The volunteering spirit of London Olympics 2012 will perish without a new big idea - It was a wonderful time, that brought out the best in people, but Britain needs a new grand project to harness the communitarian spirit - 3rd May
 * One easy way to raise GDP – just get companies to answer the phone - Automated responses and a lack of human flexibility cause unnecessary delays - 1st May
 * As an old empire emerges from Europe's new alliances, Cameron will be left behind - If the PM thinks he can ally himself with the ‘new Europeans’ to reform the EU, he has another thing coming. These countries now have their own agenda - 26th April
 * Thatcher's funeral: Someone in front of me unfurled a banner reading ‘But we loved her’ - Aside from the quiet, what struck me most was the heterogeneity of the crowd - 17th April
 * Go on, dare to ask – even if it turns out to be far out of your league - One set of shelves turned out to cost almost as much as a studio flat - 17th April
 * Paris Brown: Stop pandering to the young – the world needs grown-ups, too - To varying degrees, everyone feels sorry for Brown. But this consensus masks a more misguided trend - of well-meaning adults trying to get down with the kids - 12th April
 * It has come to something when you warm to the new local rubbish tip - A while back, with stuff to throw out that was unworthy of the local charity shop, I looked up the council’s provision for refuse disposal. The website referred me to a “facility” which – it also informed me – was closed - 10th April
 * Kim Jong-un: The dictator’s night seems darkest immediately before the dawn - History has shown the point at which totalitarian rulers start to loosen their grip, whether voluntarily or under pressure, is also the most perilous - 6th April
 * With so many shops and cinemas open, the religious side of Easter seemed to pass almost unnoticed - Not so long ago almost everything shut down on Good Friday and Easter Sunday - 3rd April
 * Cyprus doesn’t mean island economies are doomed to fail - The size of Malta's banking sector in relation to overall GDP is almost identical to Cyprus' - and yet this nation has followed quite a different economic course - 29th March
 * What I overheard on the Tube tells me Gove is making the right enemies - Do all teachers feel like those ATL members who denounced the Education Secretary this week? - 29th March
 * Boris Berezovsky: The lone oligarch who poisoned Britain’s relations with Russia - No UK asylum ruling drew more political venom from Moscow - 25th March
 * The Chancellor has missed his chance to cure this country of our very British obsession with property - We should follow Europe and offer more long-lease accommodation for rent - 22nd March
 * Oh, take me back to the Russian island of Sakhalin – and its all too British weather - 21st March
 * As Obama flies in, this feels like a Berlin Wall moment for Israel - There is now a majority here in favour of a two-state solution - 15th March
 * Vicky Pryce, Chris Huhne and why this was not a criminal trial, but a divorce case by proxy - Had the former Lib Dem MP accepted his points as a fair cop, so much else could have been avoided. Should the case have come to court at all? - 8th March
 * The hot air balloon crash in Egypt was more than just another tragic news story - These sudden-death shocks come out of nowhere and put you on your guard - 6th March
 * It doesn’t take specialist coppers to solve rape cases. Just good coppers - Singling out crimes for special treatment by the police may have perverse results - 1st March
 * Don’t let the developers take your last civil right – the right to light - 27th February
 * Think of the children? Politics needs to grow up and stop putting the youngest first - To separate the situation of children, whether materially or legally, from that of their parents is disingenuous - channelling money their way solves nothing - 22nd February
 * Scholars must get used to openness, too - What is going on here is nothing less than protectionism applied to publicly funded research - 15th February
 * Jewel-encrusted limos, corseted croupiers: who could resist a flutter online? - People face enough claims on their cash without TV ads for online casinos - 13th February
 * From Virginia to Volgograd, our national myths need to be understood rather than mocked - The re-re-naming of Stalingrad and Spielberg's latest film Lincoln are both examples of how we revise our national history to suit the needs of the current times - 8th February
 * What price service, when the customer is always in the wrong? - Two complaints within a matter of weeks, and the reception was far from helpful - 5th February
 * Gotta love those Royals: on the Tube, eating Big Macs, doing a day’s work - Just imagine the possibilities if the Royals were just like us... - 1st February
 * Dear Mr Boles, there’s a lot worse than living among disused offices - I'm starting to pine for life among office blocks. 9-to-5 workers don't play loud music in front of open windows, nor do they have noisy children - 30th January
 * The tide may be turning on a discredited business model - Anyone looking for the canary in the mine might consider the fall in MBA degrees - 25th January
 * To hope may be human, but don’t deceive us about possible cures - Not everything can be cured by the love of a good woman - 23rd January
 * Tall buildings and low flying do not mix - The helicopter accident in London is a warning - 20th January
 * Why today’s American presidents need a third term - Roosevelt's four terms put many off the idea, but an eight year limit - with the distraction of a re-election campaign midway - is short by international standards - 18th January
 * Why must you and I pay for Savile’s crimes? - No good can come from the slew of lawsuits and payouts sure to follow - 15th January
 * This outcry over rail fare increases is a just a softie southerners' whinge - Stop all the special offers and reintroduce a direct relationship between distance and cost - 4th January
 * If we want to prevent the kidnapping of children like Atiya, we must tighten UK border controls - How was a father able to take a three year-old from Britain to Lahore unhindered? And why are UK lawyers so resigned to a continued rise in cross-border abductions? - 2nd January



Articles: 2012

 * Britain’s middle class is not just squeezed but deceived - Multinational corporations have always been favoured by Government at the cost of the little man - but the situation has deteriorated since the banking crash - 21st December
 * Why I would carry a gun in the US - First, there's self-defence. Then the high principle of states trusting their citizens - 18th December
 * Wake up: these new sources of energy will change the world - It would be a brave and idealistic government that said No to shale; the Coalition is neither - 14th December
 * So you thought our courts were open and accessible? Think again - It's far too difficult to get information unless you have an 'in' - 12th December
 * Alexander Perepilichnyy: Another mightily convenient Russian death - Who benefits? People whose nefarious activities stood to be exposed by this whistleblower - 29th November
 * Your home is a flood risk? That’s life - Ministers and councils have been complicit in allowing building on floodplains, so it's somewhat inevitable that these streets will eventually be flooded - 27th November
 * As the new Director General of the BBC, Tony Hall should champion Royal Opera House elitism - A focus on quality above all else would help the BBC out of its rut - 23rd November
 * Don’t those of us who avoided Payment Protection Insurance (PPI) deserve a little something, too? - Our Notebook writer took an infuriating call the other day. Plus: what a complaint from David Beckham teaches us about air travel and anonymity - 21st November
 * The real villains of the Abu Qatada case are not Theresa May, Jordan, or European courts - but MI5 - Those who wrongly blame Strasbourg have the wind in their sales. But if this preacher of hate is deemed a threat to British security, why was he not tried in a British court? - 16th November
 * The downfall of CIA head David Petraeus may be a blessing in disguise - The commander and the president never saw exactly eye to eye; Obama now has more freedom to exert his will in the military sphere - 13th November
 * Drop this Great British fetish with childhood - For all the outcry over deviant stars, most abuse is committed by someone known to the child - 9th November
 * A letter's old-fashioned fraud, but I start to worry when a scam artist in China knows where I live - What's this? My long-lost relative John Dejevsky has suddenly passed away? Well, that would be extremely sad news if "John" had ever existed - 7th November
 * Hurricane Sandy blew Obama and Romney off course, but it's the President who has the momentum just days ahead of the election - The political impact of natural disasters can change a nation's history - 2nd November
 * I wish our politicians would stop talking about reforming the NHS and just get on and do it - Notebook: Medics and members of parliament who support change are not getting their message out - as dismal attendance of a meeting in north west London testifies - 31st October
 * Be on your toes when Putin enters the room - Our writer finds the Russian President sharp, focused and worth the wait at an annual discussion of Russia and its place in the world - 27th October
 * I’ll happily wager Russians will have a new capital by mid-century - Moscow's time is running out - St Petersburg's renovation has brought the city a renewed sense of dignity and civic pride - 24th October
 * BBC Director-General, Governor of the Bank of England: Today’s top jobs are too big for anyone - Perhaps some bodies – the Bank of England, the BBC – are too complex to be managed successfully by any single individual - 19th October
 * I've lived under the flight path to Heathrow much too long to doubt the damage air pollution can do - Our writer has written at length about aircraft noise in the past. Here she reflects on a recent study on the subject. Below: the fuss over sexist front pages - 17th October
 * Wave goodbye to the showboaters and mavericks. The age of serious politics has finally begun - During conference season our leaders presented arguments, defended positions and engaged in debate. Are we finally ready to have a real conversation - 12th October
 * Children know what real words are; teachers mustn’t mislead them - The new system of phonics angers me as much as it did when it was first introduced - 10th October
 * Learn from the errors of the Westland Affair and let the Europeans come to our defence - Yet again, when Britain is forced to choose between a special relationship with America and cultural affinity with Europe, it chooses dithering and delay instead - 5th October
 * Would any jury have convicted Jimmy Savile? - Is the cover-up - if there was one - really so incomprehensible? - 2nd October
 * Cameron can’t do a Boris – and shouldn’t try - US talk shows are a test even for politicians with real charisma - and a British Prime Minister has no need to recast himself as a celebrity - 28th September
 * Of giraffes - the ones that got away and the ones that didn't - A look back at the surreal history of these creatures shows them to be the most surreal in the natural world - 26th September
 * Let’s brainstorm Europe’s common social ills - Sometimes, the best solutions to common political problems lie outside politics. By banging our heads together we can reach better results. Let's do it more often - 21st September
 * What the court battle of the oligarchs says about Britain - Why can someone shovel cash into the UK without any enquiry into its provenance? - 31st August
 * Help – can't live with it, but sometimes you can't live without it - We thought not only that we could have it all, but that we should do it all as well - 28th August
 * We're rewriting the nation's future. Here's how it looks... - Big projects, stamped with a Union Jack, were ecstatically embraced by public opinion - 24th August
 * Treat a foreign language as a tool for life, not an A-level to be failed - This year's A-level results brought the predictable breast-beating about the decline in foreign languages - 22nd August
 * We volunteered for the Games, but not for the Big Society - Volunteering at the London Olympics was a glorious one-off, but a one-off nonetheless - 16th August
 * Joining the volunteer army has restored my faith in humanity - The trees are silhouetted against a mottled crimson sunset, you can detect more than the occasional mosquito, and still the people keep arriving - 13th August
 * London has looked fabulous. Can we keep it that way, please? - The pictures show that we have a city that is worth looking after - 10th August
 * Here's how MPs could have it all - Why can't they take part in debates in the modern mode, by webcam?
 * Give war a chance - the lesson from the Olympics - Intervening in other people's wars may delay the inevitable and cost more lives - 3rd August
 * Pussy Riot's enemies don't stop at Putin - The Church is one of few institutions to have flourished since the fall of the USSR - 1st August
 * Don't close campuses just because school's out for summer - Any new structure should have to earn its keep right around the year - 27th July
 * I've got the answer to our housing crisis: the prefab - They don’t come with mountains of rubble or fleets of heavy-duty lorries - 24th July
 * Watch, hope and plan – there is no more that outsiders can do - The tipping point is reached when people start to believe that the Syrian regime is doomed - 20th July
 * What is the role of our armed forces if it's not to defend us? - G4S appears to have convinced doubters that all was fine, until suddenly it was not - 13th July
 * I'm a Europhile – but I'm not afraid of an EU referendum - Why not let Europe reconstitute itself without the British cuckoo in its nest? - 6th July
 * Even cold warriors like me miss communists - There should be a place in British politics for a party of the far left, that exalts work and refuses to compromise with capitalism - 4th July
 * Wrong size, wrong place, wrong memorial - This recognition of Bomber Command can only perpetuate a controversy that was retreating, rightly, to its historical context - 29th June
 * Happy drivers are well-directed drivers - From the map, it was clear: there was no avoiding the vast conurbation that is Rotterdam - 27th June
 * Sow strife in Syria and reap the whirlwind across the region - Even those interventions filed in the 'success' box have yet to produce orderly self-reliant states - 8th June
 * It's no longer the Murdoch press in the dock, it's the politicians - Leveson is doing the sort of inquisitorial job that rightly belongs to Parliament - 1st June
 * Native English, alas, is degenerating into a global dialect - It is easy to believe that, as native English speakers, we have a stupendous advantage over those who have to learn the lingua franca of our age - 30th May
 * Why the political left should adopt the 'flat tax' - Ed Miliband could become the advocate of low tax, the 'squeezed middle' and an effective state - 25th May
 * Legalise brothels – but let's get prostitutes off the streets - The sooner we legalise prostitution, permit registered brothels and regulate the sex industry, the better - 23rd May
 * Russia under Putin will be different this time - What happens next will be determined by changes that will increasingly be out of the President's control - 18th May
 * Asian grooming - The truth is that these girls were worth more to them than to us - As what became known as the Asian grooming trial finally reached its sentencing stage this week, I found myself thinking back to the few days I had spent in the company of a half-dozen British-born Pakistanis - 11th May
 * Why should money buy anyone an airport fast-track? - Forgive me for feeling a bit miffed, but could it be time to patent ideas? - 9th May
 * Don't fall for easy assumptions about how the French will vote - Sarkozy and Hollande were not play-acting in the TV debate: they really, truly loathe each other - 4th May
 * Don't knock Boris and Ken – they're making democracy work - To cite London as proof that mayors are a bad idea is to disregard the real changes they have brought - 27th April
 * You can mislead a minister, but don't make her a laughing stock - It is not hard to discern a good deal of political opportunism behind all the noise about Abu Qatada - 20th April
 * The cost of our wars laid bare - The costs of mental illness, addiction and homelessness among those returning are only going to mount - 18th April
 * Even the super-rich should pay their taxes first - A state where 'little people' pay tax, while 'big people' endow scholarships, hardly constitutes a Big Society - 13th April
 * What a strange way to say 'Welcome to Britain' - Notebook: With all the visitors expected in Britain for the Queen's Jubilee and then for the Olympics, you might ask, as I did when I passed its boarded-up shell recently, why one of London's major tourist information offices has been closed - 4th April
 * Just because you live in a flat, doesn't mean you don't deserve a bit of peace - Notebook: Noise from neighbours, as I've learnt from flat-dwelling in several countries and over many years, can drive you to distraction - 21st March
 * Mr Cameron is a prime minister too English for his own good - He is at home in Westminster, in the City and the Shires. He does not always travel well - 16th March
 * Nice words and a soft toy won't be enough to save this dog's reputation - Notebook: It's a pity the furore about over-breeding led the BBC to give up its coverage of Crufts. I find it hard to keep track - 14th March
 * Tax families fairly, and child benefit solves itself - Why is the child benefit anomaly being treated as a one-off, rather than as a symptom of a wider ill? - 9th March
 * We're not above tolerating a bit of electoral malpractice ourselves - Notebook: In a week that opened with reports of widespread fraud in Russia's presidential election, I feel obliged to point out that, for all their preaching about the conduct of democracy, Western countries are not all squeaky clean when it comes to voting - 7th March (see news & updates below)
 * Putin will win the presidency – but to survive he must change - The children of those whose discontent brought down the USSR ask why so little progress has been made - 2nd March
 * The 'homme fatal' is as deadly as his female counterpart - Gillard and Merkel have found it as hard as Thatcher did to prevent inroads on their power - 24th February
 * An epitaph for the selfish charm of yesterday's bourgeoisie - Carnage is just one, albeit the most extreme, example of a spate of works that puts today's middle class under the microscope - 18th February
 * The cult of football is a blight on our national life - The pre-eminence of football in England is both distorting and debasing - 10th February
 * Stop this fraternal feud and give us a real opposition - Labour, more than any other party, should understand the price of unresolved rivalry - 3rd February
 * Could France show Europe how to move left? - Across Europe, a widespread assumption has been that the combination of the cold economic climate, harsh austerity measures, and general disillusionment with politicians boosts the electoral chances of the populist right - 27th January
 * Now I know to my cost – rogue ATMs really exist - I was always rather sceptical of those who complained about putting their card into an ATM and getting nothing out. Until it happened to me - 25th January
 * It will be our fault if Egypt's revolution is lost - As the caravan celebrating one year of the Arab Spring moves on from Tunisia to Egypt, the mood in the West, at least, is one of remembered joy and present relief - 20th January
 * In the new order of chivalry, fathers go first - The other day, an elderly man with a walking-stick stood back to let me get on the bus. I signalled for him to get on first, but he insisted. In his canon, gender trumped age and infirmity. This sort of chivalry, though, is disappearing fast - 18th January
 * Success for Ed Miliband could be a turn to the right - The premise that anyone else would do better against Cameron must be treated with caution - 6th January
 * Removing faulty breast implants is imperative – but not at our expense - It's going to happen; just a question of when. I give it a week. Breast implants (or rather the removal thereof) will stop being an issue, and become a feminist issue - 4th January



Articles: 2011

 * Weeping and wailing – alien to us but not necessarily fake - The scenes of mourning beamed in from Pyongyang spoke of a response to death that is quite alien to the modern Western world. So alien that the question was repeatedly asked: how much of it was real? - 29th December
 * The hollowed-out city invites lawlessness - The Oxford Street killing highlights the lack of families on London's main shopping thoroughfare - 28th December
 * Breaking up should not be so hard to do - Separation is eminently feasible, where a strong sense of nationhood and accepted borders exist - 23rd December
 * History's verdict on George Bush may be kinder - He had many, many faults, but on some of the very big ideas he may have been right - 16th December
 * Who says we're too stupid to rate care homes? - When I, or someone I know, has a bad experience with a public service – or a stellar one for that matter – as a writer and reporter, I have a privileged outlet for blame or praise. Most people do not - 14th December
 * Britain must join the euro – and Cameron is the man to do it - Tory Eurosceptics have one prejudice that unites them - xenophobic Little Englandism - 9th December
 * Russia Notebook, Part 3 - Obninsk 'science city', Novosti building. and Skolkovo - Medvedev's pet project - 3rd December
 * Our irrational preoccupation with growth - Higher GDP, shared out unequally among more people, will not produce greater wellbeing - 2nd December
 * The booing of Putin – and other hints of change - There is palpable concern in Russia's power structures that a decade of stability could be drawing to a close - 25th November
 * Russia Notebook, Part 2 - The car plant, contradictions of a provincial city, corruption and poor infrastructure - 22nd November
 * Theresa May - another lady who's not for turning - It was striking that the MPs who were most effective in rumbling the witnesses were women - 18th November
 * The restaurant was called Le Cheval Blanc – but I didn't expect real horses - Russia Notebook: However many times I visit Russia, there's always something to surprise - 15th November
 * Have the Greeks got it in them to save themselves – and Europe? - When scared enough and yanked from familiar moorings, elected leaders may not do a bad job - 4th November
 * Now, Mary Portas, what about betting shops? - Gambling occupies the ground floor, toddlers are upstairs - 2nd November
 * No euro rescue will heal the rupture at the Continent's heart - Even the efforts of Merkel and Sarkozy have failed to conceal very real cracks - 28th October
 * These cuts are a fraction of what BBC needs - In time, the Corporation will face an even harsher commercial reality, with only fading memories of the glory days - 7th October
 * Will Israel still exist in 2048? - The choice might be between a fortress state and one so weak that federation with Palestine becomes plausible - 30th September
 * Why a life for a life is justice in the US - Two thirds of the way through your first term is no time to wobble on the death penalty if you intend to seek re-election - 23rd September
 * Undeclared gifts corrode public life - The Metropolitan Police and other forces have finally ventured in where other institutions still fear to tread - 16th September
 * The other special relationship - Cameron's visit to Russia will be hailed in Moscow as a sign Britain is ready to lay the Litvinenko affair to rest - 9th September
 * When the middle classes flee - In the face of such hostility, is it any wonder that women will pay for a birth that is, as far as possible, on their terms? - 2nd September
 * Say what you like about Coulson, he's missed at No 10 - There may be questions that Cameron failed to ask four years ago. But this appointment was not, of itself, perverse, headstrong or ill-advised - 31st August
 * The false romance of revolution - The arguments, as between order and disorder, may be more finely balanced than the all-or-nothing view of the Arab Spring - 26th August
 * Guilty – of being an urban nimby - The Planning minister, Greg Clark, used some colourful language to attack the National Trust and the Campaign to Protect Rural England for, as he claimed, always objecting to development - 24th August
 * Tourists can be delicate flowers - At the height of the rioting in London, I arrived home to find our American guest transfixed by the television coverage - 17th August
 * The blurred fringe of the Big Society - It was heart-warming to see the good folk of Clapham, Hackney and the rest mobilise themselves for a mass clear-up, using the same social media that had summoned the urban pillagers less than 24 hours before - 11th August
 * Slow down – and get things done - France's measured purpose married to local ambition that plans on a modest scale is something we could learn from - 10th August
 * So you thought Britain wasn't corrupt? - Two of the most deep-rooted maladies of British society are freebies among friends and jobs for the boys - 22nd July
 * The property ladder that threatens to become a snake - A home is no longer the cash-cow it has recently been - 15th July
 * Condemning Murdoch is too easy - It's convenient for some people that an impression is being created that these practices were unique - 8th July
 * The teachers' real grievance is status - Instead of being bracketed with doctors and lawyers, they are now more likely to be classed with local council staff - 1st July
 * Obama is right... - ... Britain, too, must seize the chance to leave Afghanistan - 24th June
 * Why are high-street banks increasingly alien territory? - You can't open a savings account without an 'adviser' - 17th June
 * It is a warped mind that demands custody or death - Is there more that could be done to prevent such crimes? - 10th June
 * A system that leaves care to the lowest paid is itself sick - The bullying was off the map of what is permissible in a civilised country - 3rd June
 * All I wanted were my Cheerios - The new boss of M &amp; S, Marc Bolland, responded to customer complaints about the difficulty of navigating the stores by sending scouts incognito to buy 10 specified items within an hour
 * Don't bank on the eclipse of the West - Obama's thesis can't just be dismissed as simplistic American cheerleading - 27th May
 * A feminist presumption of victimhood impairs justice - Rape is rape is rape – and a very serious crime. Let's get that over with - 20th May
 * Only a 'big bang' will excise corruption - All council tenancies should be declared void and all rents raised to a competitive market level - 13th May
 * Real achievements that show Clegg's plight is undeserved - While he is guilty of misjudgements, he has also suffered some very bad luck - 6th May
 * We love a national get-together... - ... Can't we have more of them? - 29th April
 * Westminster as you won't see it on TV - For days now, there has been the sense of the world closing in – speaking locally, I mean - 27th April
 * Misrata is where wishful thinking must yield to realism - The parallels have always been with Iraq - 22nd April
 * The food police have got at my pizza - I am as partial to a pizza as anyone, and the chain restaurant around the corner does a passable job - 20th April
 * There is an immigration problem... - ... but Cameron won't dare tackle it - 15th April
 * And they still want to get us into debt - When I peruse what is left on shop clothes' rails at sale time I can't help feeling a bit proud of myself and my fellow-countrywomen - 13th April
 * Genetic testing has little value... - ... if there's no chance of a cure - 8th April
 * The feminisation of foreign policy - The Clinton-Rice-Power trio underwrote the use of armed force against armed force for purpose of protecting civilians - 2nd April
 * Is public anger finally going to erupt? - Until recently the Government was enjoying a conspicuously easy ride. But people's mood is changing - 25th March
 * The West still labours under shadow of Iraq - Political constraints are now placed on Western action anywhere - especially in an Arab country - 18th March
 * These are the perils when we outsource war reporting - Reporters who are clearly 'foreign' can be forgiven for making 'mistakes' - 11th March
 * Let nature take its course at 23 weeks - It's not just financial austerity that makes the wisdom of resuscitating very premature babies a discussion that needs to be had - 9th March
 * We need names behind 'debacle in the desert' - This was a debacle that would have been the stuff of high comedy, were the context not the rapidly accelerating civil war in Libya and the risk not to real and highly trained British lives - 7th March
 * Our view of libraries is sepia-tinted - I am all in favour of libraries – or I was, in pre-internet days - 4th March
 * He who pays the university piper... - The LSE is hardly unique in accepting Croesus-chests of foreign money - 2nd March
 * This is Cameron's Ecclestone moment - In spending his half-term as Britain's carpetbagger-in-chief, he has shown breathtaking misjudgement - 25th February
 * Vladimir Putin and the people - Russia's Prime Minister is feared in the West – but adored at home. Is the reason we don't trust him that we don't really understand him? - 23rd February
 * These welfare reforms won't end our costly sick-note culture - It is doubtful benefits will fall to point where low-paid jobs become attractive - 18th February
 * We can't stop getting Russia wrong - Russians enjoy more freedom than is often condescendingly understood - 15th February
 * The cult of charismatic leadership has gone too far - To lionise individuals is asking for trouble - 11th February
 * Want benefits of marriage? Take the plunge - If two people decide not to register their relationship, what duty should the law have to them? - 4th February
 * Signs of a quiet accord designed to limit fallout - Egypt's allies face a diabolical set of choices. How to respond when confronted with mass calls for democracy from the streets, a long-time friend under threat, and the risk of anarchy that, once unleashed, could spread across the whole region? - 3rd February
 * Is Obama Egypt's great enabler? - The US President's words have gone with the grain of Middle East societies - 2nd February
 * It's time we stopped seeing national borders as sacrosanct - Countries and territories change, for one reason or another - 28th January
 * Everyone is working 24/7... - ... except those who should be - 21st January
 * Buy presents online? You must be joking - 19th January
 * Fact: our politicians are not necessarily safer than theirs - No one can accuse Sarah Palin of bending with the prevailing wind - 14th January
 * It helps if doctors speak words we understand - Blair's degradation of the language should be up there with the Iraq war - 4th January



Articles: 2010

 * panic. Britain is very far from being a Zimmer nation'' - We British have an unerring capacity to look on the gloomy side - 31st December
 * my M4 success and other triumphs'' - Driving on the M4 back to London on Christmas Eve was a joy and a delight - 29th December
 * about café culture and embrace your inner Viking'' - For the third year in a row, the UK has been caught on the hop by the snow - 24th December
 * strong government refuses to countenance failure'' - All the Coalition needs is a Plan B - 17th December
 * power balance is shifting'' - There is suddenly more to the Wiki-Leaks saga than once it seemed - 10th December
 * snow close so many schools?'' - Fresh snowfalls brought more school closures: around 900 shut in Scotland - 8th December
 * born the day 999 let us down'' - Time and again passengers have noted how official help was, for an excruciatingly long time, simply not there - 30th November
 * else is being cut, so why not student numbers?'' - Much of the recent expansion reflects a dubious 'academicisation of skills' - 26th November
 * the season not just to go shopping'' - 24th November
 * nation's success is defined by much more than its GDP'' - If I were a French politician, I would demand an apology from the US and UK - 19th November
 * seen the light about dark streets'' - City councils could issue every man, woman and child with a Hi Viz vest - 16th November
 * Britain?'' - The choice is starker than it has ever been - 12th November
 * and traumatised'' - Switching your ISP is right up there with moving house and the rest - 9th November
 * need to limit immigration...'' - ... but this isn't the way to do it - 5th November
 * the old care for the elderly'' - The carers will see their future mirrored in those they are helping - 2nd November
 * chattering class that is out of touch'' - There is a rather different approach to the looming age of austerity - 22nd October
 * who loiter without intent'' - If the guardians of law and order cannot hold the line here, what hope elsewhere? - 19th October
 * new global brand for success'' - The publicity the country has enjoyed this week is a one-off rocket boost to its international standing - 15th October
 * the jargon that obscures sense'' - The usual buzzwords – delivery, conflict management etc – are two a penny - 12th October
 * fault at the heart of the system'' - Together, these measures signal the end of the child-centred tax and benefits system so dear to Gordon Brown and a return to government for grown-ups - 8th October
 * life goes from Sauchiehall Street'' - Glasgow was collectively a disaster, but individually open and welcoming - 5th October
 * is the BBC World Service for?'' - The most elegant solution would be for it to be incorporated into the mainstream BBC - 1st October
 * the hypermarket had its day?'' - Downsizing could reflect a shift away from consumption for its own sake - 28th September
 * the US Constitution had its day?'' - The ignorance and bickering the present system fosters in a new administration is not worthy of a world power - 24th September
 * opiate for seething masses'' - The government might ensure that soap operas stay extra-compulsive viewing - 21st September
 * defence of Benedict and his faith'' - Given the orgy of hostility that preceded his arrival, he might have been forgiven if he had chosen to stay - 17th September
 * patients who must come first'' - For those with life and death decisions to make, 48 hours a week is quite enough - 14th September
 * dares wins – in politics, too'' - It's not enough to be confident and ambitious. You have to go on seizing the opportunities - 10th September
 * is right about the Roma'' - Should French tax-payers have to pay for schools and services and training? - 3rd September
 * stop trying to end child poverty'' - Notebook: Much cooing across the nation, I've no doubt, at the photos of a devoted David Cameron and baby Florence – though you might want to ask why we didn't get to see Samantha, too. Maybe No 10 did not want to present too conventionally perfect a picture of family bliss, lest it be deemed to imply criticism of others, single parents, for instance, at a time when families of all kinds fear the effect of "the cuts" - 31st August
 * Ulster, and earn a peace bonus'' - How much longer must the British Government go on trying to expiate the sins of our forefathers in N Ireland? - 27th August
 * bitter truths overheard on a bus'' - People talk on buses as on no other form of public transport - 24th August
 * grades that money can buy'' - Even in the US, it is harder for monied parents to fast-track their children from primary school to the elite universities - 20th August
 * privacy is non-negotiable'' - Mixed-sex wards remain an NHS scandal that is very much alive - 17th August
 * it really be an angry autumn?'' - Trade unions are forecasting discontent and rioting in the streets - 13th August
 * light a bonfire of official vanities'' - I want to highlight NHS shortcomings and suggest feasible improvements - 10th August
 * seasonal affective disorder'' - There is shade across the Channel as well as light - 5th August
 * not fight this gender war'' - Women see the public sector as more reliable, responsible and humane - 3rd August
 * this murderer matters'' - The tributes to Raoul Moat reflect a world very different from that of the PM - 16th July
 * scandal quite like a French one'' - One feature of les affaires is that they are rarely about people taking, or even paying, money on their account - 9th July
 * what's Clegg done wrong?'' - The reason this coalition has the right-of-centre complexion it does is that this is how the country voted - 2nd July
 * spy mission left behind by history, or a new tactic by post-Soviet Russia?'' - Having worked as a reporter in Moscow, Washington and indeed London, I have learnt only two lessons from the periodic eruption of espionage dramas - 30th June
 * who baths New Labour's babies?'' - Britain may be a tardy convert to the leadership debate, but we're giving everyone a run for their money now - 18th June
 * skill is to cut costs, not jobs'' - The private sector has demonstrated that redeployment, shorter hours, voluntary departures and trimmed pay can help spread work around - 17th June
 * truths beneath an idyllic surface'' - It still seems strange to find the name Iain Duncan Smith in the same sentence as "Secretary for Work and Pensions" and "compassionate conservatism" - 11th June
 * time to grab back our gardens'' - They are an integral part of the suburban landscape; they are what makes it desirable and family-friendly - 10th June
 * it Trident or nothing, after all?'' - If Britain is intent on retaining its status as a nuclear power, then vulnerability argument has to be - 2nd June
 * moment I turned into Gillian Duffy'' - It's shaming, I know. But within minutes of arriving at the dealership to deliver the car for a routine service, I had a Gillian Duffy moment - 14th May
 * were always going to sort it out. So what was all the fuss about?'' - Even in so-called 'mature' democracies elections are treacherous territory for rulers - 12th May
 * little voter fraud goes a long way'' - There's something delightfully quaint about voting in Britain - 7th May
 * cuts are a duty of government'' - A thorough audit of where taxpayers' money currently goes should precede every new government's first budget - 5th May
 * superior sort of Tesco town'' - Is the term "Tesco town" about to take on a whole new meaning? - 30th April
 * voters are back in the game'' - Instead of courting us with promises the parties have taken to threatening us - 28th April
 * ghost that should be more spectral'' - If you can bring yourself to separate the director from the fallible man, go to see the latest offering from Roman - 23rd April
 * we the next 'new' Europeans?'' - New Europe was the neat formula coined by Donald Rumsfeld in aid of the Bush administration's war effort. The "old Europeans" disliked and derided it, as it suggested that Europe was more divided over the Iraq invasion than it actually was. But they could never deny its grain of truth. There was indeed a split between those who signed up to the Bush crusade for democracy in foreign parts – not least because of their recent history – and those who saw the same campaign as a misuse of military might - 21st April
 * this model hospital still there for all?'' - To cast even the most gentle aspersion on a national treasure is to risk big trouble. Just ask Joanna Lumley, or rather the minister forced to apologise for condemning her silence on destitute Gurkhas. So it is with some trepidation that I raise the subject of Great Ormond Street hospital... - 16th April
 * already do too much. Don't expect us to govern, too'' - There are surely services that the state has a duty to provide - 14th April
 * is rediscovering nationhood'' - A long time ago, 20 years at least, we decided to visit parts of Britain we did not know - 9th April
 * 21st-century world order'' - Instinct in making foreign policy reflects ability to see the other's point of view - 6th April
 * believe the killjoys of London 2012'' - Now here's a riddle for the holiday weekend: what's on time, on budget and in Britain? - 2nd April
 * goes awol, savagery fills the gap'' - The cameras were watching – and much good that did Sofyen - 30th March
 * to win at being a UK resident'' - British Budget speeches do not customarily raise laughs, but on Wednesday Alistair Darling prompted loud guffaws, and not only from government benches, when he announced a new information exchange agreement with Belize - 26th March
 * diplomacy must live within its means'' - The devaluation of sterling will affect foreign policy, too - 23rd March
 * of perestroika anniversary'' - The Gorbachev-Yeltsin duel was as much about Russia as communism - 16th March
 * system is not fit for purpose'' - Deportation after many appeals is at least as cruel as summary refusal - 9th March
 * needs a sharper TV face abroad'' - As the furore about cuts to the BBC goes on, I'm on the side of those demanding something more radical - 5th March
 * vacuum where Germany should be'' - Coalition is a glaring example of the need to be careful what you wish for - 3rd March
 * scare us, when reality is bad enough?'' - Using public transport these days increasingly resembles a descent into Dante's nine circles of Hell - 26th February
 * fight future wars by other means'' - Who will dare suggest that the old rules of warfare should be abandoned - 23rd February
 * your bank gets too helpful by half'' - I was just beginning to feel a little more charitable towards the banks (notwithstanding the matter of bonuses at Barclays, which is in every respect far beyond my pay-grade) - 19th February
 * aged will demand better'' - Neither the NHS nor councils want to pay for elderly care if they can avoid it - 16th February
 * are you to judge artistic merit?'' - "So what does Libby Purves know about the theatre..." - 12th February
 * is throwing off Cold War shackles'' - This election was fought by and for Ukrainians, with no outside meddling - 9th February
 * I have less reason to believe'' - What was it that so tugged the heartstrings about the news that doctors had successfully communicated with a man thought to be in a vegetative state? - 5th February
 * misreading of Iran that risks a fatal replay of Iraq'' - There is no evidence at all that Iran colluded with al-Qa'ida - 2nd February
 * by the Polish question'' - A strange little debate opened up and then closed, as strange little debates have a habit of doing. It was about whether Polish migrants were going home, and if so, what proportion - 29th January
 * soon for Obama to give in to defeatism'' - More than a year after their rout, Republicans still have no leader - 26th January
 * going, gone: the art of price and value'' - Around 6.30 last Sunday evening I took a call on my mobile. Within minutes I had passed responsibility for dinner preparations to my visiting sister, forsaken my (as yet unsipped) glass of wine, and set off through the end-of-weekend traffic to an address at the unfashionable end of Chelsea - 22nd January
 * tests US diplomacy more than aid'' - The task the US confronts in Haiti is almost the opposite of Katrina - 19th January
 * to GPs: some jobs have to be 24/7'' - All right, deep down many of us are simply jealous - 15th January
 * in the wastes of St Pancras'' - As the festive season proceeded, I was positively oozing the milk of human kindness - 1st January



Articles: 2009

 * system is a security breach in itself'' - MI5 and the rest should pause to reflect, there but for the grace of God.. - 29th December
 * of the year 2009'' - Out of chaos, a new global spirit of co-operation - 23rd December
 * really wasn't such a disaster'' - The lesson to learn is that governments are elected; NGOs are not - 22nd December
 * must have a sense of proportion'' - A few weeks ago I described difficulties we, and the council, faced when trying to get a planning decision enforced - 18th December
 * is not only the young who suffer'' - The plight of innocent children is used as a way to infiltrate hearts – and wallets - 15th December
 * we stay away from the Post Office'' - It's that time of year again, and I don't mean the time when the Christmas lights are prematurely lit - 11th December
 * leadership is an outdated hope'' - The EU did not want a traffic-stopping standard-bearer - 8th December
 * the state should invest in wedlock'' - David Cameron's super-disciplined Conservatives are threatening each other with divorce – over marriage - 4th December
 * exploded the special relationship'' - Tony Blair will not be the only, or even the greatest, victim of the Chilcot inquiry - 1st December
 * not call Blair now and wrap it up?'' - The enquiry already seems like a sideline as the queues dwindle - 28th November
 * they wonder why we don't believe them'' - Maybe it's just nostalgia, but I seem to remember a time when you felt you could trust those in positions of authority – academic experts, company directors, even bank managers and politicians – to take questions seriously and to tell the truth - 27th November
 * that work the wrong way'' - London Metropolitan University is a very far cry indeed from Oxbridge - 24th November
 * man in need of withdrawal'' - O frabjous day! Callooh! Callay! I have arrived at the local cash-machine to find no one there - 20th November
 * we can! (Slash the budget deficit)'' - Once you begin to look, the cuts just start rolling in - 17th November
 * law, as seen from my window'' - 13th November
 * realism is a political virtue, too'' - No ideological vision could have replaced sound judgement in 1989 - 10th November
 * don't need an MP's pay to live in SW1'' - Of all the arguments advanced by disgruntled MPs against Sir Christopher Kelly's proposed curbs on their expenses, there is one that I find particularly, outrageously, dishonest. It is the one that says they will produce a Parliament of the super-rich - 6th November
 * the Berlin Wall – and not only how it fell'' - For decades there will be those who live in fear of a knock at the door - 3rd November
 * fiasco that shows British diplomacy is clapped out'' - If, as it appears, yesterday's EU summit spelled the end of Tony Blair's undeclared ambition to be the first President of Europe, you have to ask whether he really wanted the job at all - 31st October
 * is useful information still so elusive?'' - In the tech world they are called "early adopters", and I am definitely not one of them – save in three respects - 30th October
 * Europe and a history of lamentable mis-timing'' - David Cameron is swimming against the tide of history - 27th October
 * your hands off my health records'' - To judge by the personal information individuals cheerfully make public about themselves on Facebook and the rest, perhaps all information will eventually be deemed public unless expressly designated private - 23rd October
 * Europe's new order be the same old one?'' - Turkey is looking increasingly outward, but not in our direction - 20th October
 * the frozen heart of Asia's cold war'' - Seoul Notebook: South Korea's capital offers peculiar mismatches - 19th October
 * postman doesn't ring even once'' - There was a time when it was simple, or it seemed so. There was the Post Office (with real, working Post Offices across the land) and there was the Royal Mail which had its coat of arms on the pillar boxes. And they seemed for all practical purposes to be part of the same thing - 16th October
 * is the wrong President for Europe'' - Iraq is his most blatant disqualification, but not his only one - 13th October
 * chaos puts the brakes on Berliners'' - Berlin Notebook: I know this is Germany, where these things are not supposed to happen, but Berlin's S-Bahn has been out of action for a month - 5th October
 * problem with teenage mothers'' - When a Labour prime minister talks about placing teenage mothers in supervised hostels, you can be sure an election is in sight - 2nd October
 * we really need to remind the police what crime is?'' - What’s shocking about the Pilkington tragedy is officialdom’s casualness - 30th September
 * to business as usual in Germany?'' - Merkel is likely to place more emphasis on self-reliance - 29th September
 * remains divided'' - Half of voters wanted the Grand Coalition to continue - 28th September
 * support transforms fortunes of former communist'' - Germany's rust-belt, the Ruhrgebiet, is undergoing a faltering revival, but it remains perfect campaigning territory for the far-left party, the Left - 24th September
 * of the professor, Mr Obama'' - He has an excellent case to make for each controversial decision - 22nd September
 * Nicholas and Soviet-era brutalism'' - Potsdam Notebook: Shops and houses have been restored to their former pastel elegance, but vacant plots are everywhere - 21st September
 * choose our GPs – and much more too'' - For a long time government ministers bombarded us with talk of "choice", without offering much that anyone could really exercise. There's no point in having "school choice", for instance, if there are only two substandard comprehensives with places - 18th September
 * dissolution is long overdue'' - If the alliance cannot prevail in Afghanistan, what price its continuation? - 7th September
 * better way to fight child sex crime'' - Sarah's Law allows carers to ask about people with access to their children - 4th September
 * is Britain so often blind to Germany's success?'' - The script, as so often, was written by the victors, but also by the victims - 2nd September
 * just do your job and leave us alone'' - How many laments have we heard recently for the traditional British pub? - 28th August
 * mean streak in the US mainstream'' - The US tolerates more inequality and suffering than is acceptable here - 25th August
 * Boris and upside of city transport'' - London is one of few places to emerge well from a nationwide survey of bus fares published yesterday - 21st August
 * real enemy of newspapers'' - In focusing on the competition from other papers, the press ignores the BBC - 18th August
 * cherished tradition in black and white'' - The zebra crossing is becoming a more endangered species than the beast itself - 14th August
 * Georgian enclaves are not assets, but liabilities'' - Georgia is independent and pro-Western - 11th August
 * that impoverishes the high street'' - It has been a long time coming, but at last someone is questioning the benefit from charity shops - 7th August
 * towns where the hustling stops'' - Languedoc Notebook: As a holiday region between the Cévennes and the sea, this area is indifferent to President Sarkozy's efforts to open the supermarket seven days a week - 5th August
 * more firsts – but don't pretend standards are higher'' - Those who need to know what your degree is worth still know - 4th August
 * a war for our hearts and minds'' - Was George Bush right to see an act of war rather than a criminal act? - 28th July
 * are the spies of old allowed to retain their romantic sheen?'' - Sir Anthony Blunt was a traitor. Whatever arrangement he reached with the government of the day when he eventually admitted spying for the Soviet Union – it would be too crude, would it not, to call it a deal – included protection for his memoirs for a quarter century after they were deposited with the British Library - 25th July
 * future is warmer – and smaller'' - Survival, it seems, is no longer about being bigger. Hooray! - 9th July
 * Obama effect can be negative too'' - In Israel, what was seen as a key omission raised huge suspicions - 7th July
 * every revolution is victorious'' - Efforts to challenge an established order fail at least as often as they succeed - 4th July
 * way we run our embassies'' - Iran shows that 'local hires' can have unwelcome consequences - 30th June
 * of Maggie's market lives on'' - Budapest Notebook: Her visit is immortalised in proudly displayed photographs. Or so it is said - 29th June
 * time to purge the legacy of Katyn'' - National image is complex and not easily improved - 23rd June
 * of Barack Obama's foreign policy need to get real'' - At this more rarefied end of the policy spectrum he is at his impressive best - 17th June
 * I try to make a complaint, bureaucracy gets in the way'' - This excessive formalisation of the feedback process is spreading - 10th June
 * is the place for Euro passion'' - Bucharest Notebook: There were real, live Euro issues being fought over, as they related to Romania - 8th June
 * revolutions of 1989 will shape the leaders of tomorrow'' - Where China's students found inspiration - 2nd June
 * generation has failed to promote its vision of Europe'' - We didn't realise we had to 'sell' the EU - 19th May
 * are less corrupt than out of date'' - Those not on the take may be tarred, quite unjustly, with that brush - 16th May
 * policy should not be dictated by exiles living here'' - Efforts to influence policy are not unique to Tamil exiles - 13th May
 * cool is a precious national asset'' - Far be it from me to be name-ist, but Ian Dalton is a name that inspires confidence the moment you say it - 7th May
 * taxpayers should cough up'' - The arguments the rich avoid are those of fairness and morality - 5th May
 * US relies on experts – we ignore them'' - US academics are needed outside the ivory tower - 28th April
 * failed meritocracy that leaves too many out of the loop'' - What is networking, if not work experience for adults? - 21st April
 * French know local pride is good'' - The French number plate bespoke a healthy type of local patriotism - 18th April
 * we put too much faith in computers?'' - Gut instinct is something we could do with a lot more of - 16th April
 * impressions matter...'' - ... that goes for visa offices too - 7th April
 * leaders can make a difference'' - We have an example within living memory of leaders who acted at a crucial juncture - 31st March
 * will be the outsider at the G20 summit'' - Britain's former divide-and-rule approach will not work this time - 24th March
 * are storing up a lot of trouble for the next generation'' - Governments of the future face as yet unsuspected liabilities - 17th March
 * is more than a set of statistics'' - The US tops the rankings because it mostly loses the indicators - 10th March
 * much power is unelected'' - What happens to accountability when peers are created to bring in expertise? - 4th March
 * residency, and a question of fairness'' - How much do we owe those who have not sworn allegiance? - 24th February
 * change happens fast – so how stable is Medvedev?'' - What seems obvious with hindsight was invisible in 1917 - 18th February
 * change happens fast'' - What seems obvious with hindsight was invisible in 1917 - 17th February
 * signals from Iran'' - Most countries find it harder than the US to switch policy track - 10th February
 * to change policy in Afghanistan'' - The Obama administration is comprehensively rethinking America’s approach to Afghanistan. At the top of the new list of objectives is “striving to secure and serve” the population - 9th February
 * do we make it so easy for people to ignore their children?'' - In Britain, the invisibility of the conventional family is notable - 3rd February
 * sensitivities of fallen empires'' - These neighbours have an almost infinite capacity to irritate each other - 27th January
 * a rebuke, and a call to unity, the great cleansing begins'' - In a speech suffused with remembered cadences, there was a streak of ruthlessness - 21st January
 * That's a very risky name change'' - Norwich Union is in the throes of a truly gruesome advertising campaign to persuade us all that it is really no different now that it is adopting the name Aviva - 16th January
 * is there to help people – not to dabble in politics'' - How is it that a charity whose purpose and image in the British public mind is so clearly defined as disaster relief, has gone down a route which is so political? - 9th January
 * does not hold all the cards in a game both sides could lose'' - Compared with the alarm spreading across Europe as gas supplies falter, the approach of the Russian and Ukrainian companies concerned has seemed positively relaxed - 8th January
 * ageing society isn't all bad news'' - The choice of when to call it a day must be the next frontier - 6th January



Articles: 2008

 * fun alongside the orange-jackets'' - The new year firework display in London was the best I can remember - 2nd January 2009
 * overlook Israel's vulnerability'' - It is a paradox that this state has gained the reputation of a bully - 30th December 2008
 * will be the death of us'' - We are back to the mentality that price is everything - 23rd December 2008
 * were we doing performing this 'rescue'?'' - This case is less about forced marriage than personal fulfilment - 16th December 2008
 * treat the police like criminals'' - Jean Charles de Menezes should not have died. Full stop; no equivocation - 13th December 2008
 * a pensions apartheid victim'' - It is absurd that the private-sector middle class should face penury - 9th December 2008
 * lost sight of our rights'' - MPs elsewhere commonly enjoy immunity from arrest - 5th December 2008
 * must not penalise stable relationships'' - Parents should not be made poorer by choosing to be one household not two - 18th November 2008
 * truth about the war in Georgia'' - The US and UK left the impression that Russia was the guilty party - 12th November 2008
 * Europe get the America it wants?'' - Over here, there is a certain amount of wishful thinking - 4th November 2008
 * you're good enough, you are old enough'' - Republicans hope Barack Obama's lack of experience will convince voters to choose John McCain next Tuesday - 30th October 2008
 * wealth is less about power than influence'' - To the Deripaska I met, possessions were not what really mattered - 23rd October 2008
 * independence is the dream that just melted away'' - The stars have moved out of alignment - 21st October 2008
 * blame Thatcher for crunch and crash'' - Her view of money was what she'd learned as a grocer's daughter - 14th October 2008
 * still TV, not the internet, that really matters in elections'' - A contest watched by the whole family in the living room - 8th October 2008
 * the chaos, we should hail the triumph of Europe'' - The vast majority of European financial institutions are not in difficulty - 3rd October 2008
 * is too harsh a word'' - The gender specificity seems rather to magnify the vilification - 25th September 2008
 * biggest loser from Georgia may be Russia'' - If, as some claim, Russia set a trap for Georgia, why was its initial response such a scramble? - 17th September 2008
 * dilemma for those of us who supported Hillary'' - 5th September 2008
 * destructive prejudices of Europe's new members'' - 2nd September 2008
 * official face of Britain can be scruffy, rude or just too mechanical'' - 30th August 2008
 * I'd love to think the US is ready for a black President'' - 27th August 2008
 * and a family secret'' - With my father, the war was something that wasn't really raised around the kitchen table - 20th August 2008
 * We may yet miss Musharraf'' - 19th August 2008
 * the bad guys? Who are the West trying to kid?'' - 15th August 2008
 * Intervention may breed instability'' - There may be times when big and small countries should be left to sort things out between themselves - Tuesday 12th August 2008
 * has its work cut out to avoid a new defeat'' - Georgia and war in South Ossetia - Saturday, 9th August 2008
 * Farewell to the keeper of Russia's conscience - All that Solzhenitsyn wrote rang true. It was suffused with personal experience of bitter conflicts - Tuesday, 5th August 2008
 * Consumer choice won't help with high gas bills - Saturday, 2nd August 2008
 * We could keep drugs out of prison if we wanted to - Thursday, 31st July 2008
 * Don't silence those who challenge consensus - Dissenters from current orthodoxies are frozen out of funding and publication - Tuesday, 22nd July 2008
 * The UN fiasco over Zimbabwe is a re-run of Iraq - There was the touching faith in the miracles that can be wrought by drafting - Tuesday, 15th July 2008
 * Don't blame Russia – it's our fault as well - Tuesday, 8th July 2008
 * So we can't afford to drive. But here's the upside - Thursday, 3rd July 2008
 * There's no reason why the world should go hungry - Wednesday, 25th June 2008
 * Do you really think our economic way is best? - In a neat reversal, the euro is helping to shore up our sinking high street - Tuesday, 17th June 2008
 * Women MPs should be able to claim for childcare - Ms Spelman's case shows how far the rules are written from a male perspective - Monday, 9th June 2008
 * So, when will a woman be elected president? - Thursday, 5th June 2008
 * The unexpected legacy of natural disasters - People's growing discontent is the danger to the regimes in Burma and China - Tuesday, 3rd June 2008
 * Surely people have a right to know if crimes are committed in their area - Saturday, 31st May 2008
 * Time to lighten up, even if not to light up - Wednesday, 28th May 2008
 * A Eurovision win that is not 'mere' politics - Former Soviet satellites like to keep their big neighbour sweet. This was a cheap way of doing it - Monday, 26th May 2008
 * In a wood-panelled hall, a heartening sight... people becoming UK citizens - Saturday, 10th may 2008
 * Take heart from the city that shaped Medvedev - Wednesday, 7th May 2008
 * So how fair are elections in this country? - The Electoral Commission has shown itself to be a toothless watchdog - Tuesday, 29th April 2008
 * Women's rights cannot be forced on Arab societies - It's over-optimistic to believe prosperity will bring a complete change in outlook - Tuesday, 22nd April 2008
 * You can call it saving the planet. I call it being a responsible citizen - Saturday 19th April 2008
 * The people are waiting. So where are the politicians? - Saturday, 12th April 2008
 * A gender divide is increasing in the professions - As the better performers at school, they have the pick of the professions - Tuesday, 8th April 2008
 * The real lesson of the Heathrow humiliation - Companies invest in buildings and infrastructure, but sadly not in their employees - Tuesday, 1st April 2008
 * Scientists must try harder to win this debate - Wednesday, 26th March 2008
 * We're suckers for a 'deal'. And it's costing us dear - If services are 'bundled', we dont know how much we are paying for what - Monday, 24th March 2008
 * Work hard? Play by the rules? You're a loser... - I simply cannot understand the abject public apathy towards the credit crunch - Tuesday, 18th March 2008
 * Family businesses don't deserve persecution by tax - The Joneses prevailed against the Revenue – to the delight of small firms everywhere - Tuesday, 11th March 2008
 * The old Soviet traditions still endure in Russia - It is possible to live in a colourless world of shared flats and a state of near-idleness - Tuesday, 4th March 2008
 * Election fever grips Russia's heartlands, but it's nothing to do with the presidency - Thursday, 28th February 2008
 * Putin's handover of power is no charade - The potential for change under a new president should not be dismissed - Tuesday, 26th February 2008
 * Why does Mohamed Al Fayed get such stick? - Thursday, 21st February 2008
 * Britain's role is shrinking on the diplomatic stage - At international gatherings, the absence of senior UK figures is conspicuous - Tuesday, 12th February 2008
 * We are seeing a return to the politics of America before Bush – and about time too - Thursday, 7th February 2008
 * Soul-searching, self-doubt and a shock to the system - Perhaps the Second Lebanon War was not the defeat it appeared in Israel - Tuesday, 29th January 2008
 * If it's back to the Cold War, it may be our fault - Tuesday, 22nd January 2008
 * The women used their votes to fight back - These primaries are male-female contests, but the coverage is mostly male - Tuesday, 15th January 2008
 * Is it worse to be a woman than a black man? - There has never been a female candidate as well qualified to be President as Hillary - Tuesday, 8th January 2008
 * Maybe we set too much store by democracy - Could a benevolent authoritarianism, with a meritocracy at the head, provide the answer for some countries? - Wednesday, 2nd January 2008



The Guardian:
Column name:

Remit/Info: International affairs (esp. Russia), the EU, the US; also UK politics and society

Section:

Role: Regular contributor

Pen-name:

Email:

Website: http://www.theguardian.com/profile/mary-dejevsky

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Day published: Varies

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Column format:

Average length:



Articles: 2016

 * Sarkozy’s out – but Marine Le Pen isn’t a shoo-in for the French presidency - The populist trend in politics and uninspiring opponents are working in favour of the National Front leader. But better challengers may be waiting in the wings - 21st November
 * Trump could bring Russia in from the cold - Far from being a Putin stooge, Trump might be able to establish a better working relationship with Russia than Obama managed - 9th November
 * Why is MI5 making such a fuss about Russia? - Putin may have played a weak hand well, but it’s still a weak hand. Here are a few reasons Andrew Parker might be keen to maintain Russia’s position as bogeyman-in-chief - 2nd November
 * Quality of life has a price. The frackers should pay it - From Heathrow and HS2 to fracking in Lancashire, big projects cause major disruption. Compensating residents instead of councils would help - 17th October
 * Protests outside the Russian embassy – what is Boris Johnson up to now? - Facetious or in earnest, the foreign secretary’s call in the Commons shows just how hard it was for him to defend the government’s line of inaction on Syria - 13th October
 * Tony Blair couldn’t possibly return to politics. Or could he? - He is, for many, thoroughly damaged goods. But if anyone can pull off the big political comeback, it’s the former Labour prime minister - 8th October
 * Syria isn’t a cold war conflict: the US and Russia can’t just fix it - The superpowers have little control over events in Aleppo. Others must intervene if there is to be peace - 5th October
 * Britain is no paragon of sporting virtue – let’s stop pretending otherwise - As the latest scandal involving now ex-England manager Sam Allardyce and questions over cyclists’ drug exemptions show, the UK plays no fairer than anyone else - 28th September
 * In Syria at sundown tomorrow, the US-Russia deal faces its first test - An initiative by the two major powers has a distinctly retro feel: they may find they can no longer snap their fingers and command hostilities to stop - 12th September
 * Don’t panic – Brexit might just bring the UK closer to Europe - Post-empire, post-European Union, Britain is about to be redefined once more. And Theresa May won’t ignore the 48% - 5th September
 * At Theresa May’s Brexit awayday, spats and spin must be put aside - The summer break was dominated by quarrelling between new ministers and lobbying. Now the cabinet must tackle the big questions of leaving the EU - 31st August
 * The Brexit vote must stand. Owen Smith is wrong to suggest otherwise - It’s patronising and self-serving to say people didn’t know what they were voting for. They did, and the decision has to be upheld - 24th August
 * What does Theresa May really think about China? - The prime minister is trying to smooth Chinese feathers ruffled by the delay to a Hinkley Point decision, but her long-term aims are more opaque - 17th August
 * At last, courageous thinking from Labour on education - While Theresa May and Owen Smith rehash old ideas, Jeremy Corbyn’s plans are based on common sense and would be life-changing for the least privileged - 15th August
 * Are the Dover delays revenge for Brexit – or bad news for Theresa May? - The 14-hour traffic jams on approaches to the Channel port have been blamed on French spite, but they have shown up a critical lack of Home Office planning - 25th July
 * The death penalty must not be the legacy of Turkey’s quashed coup - President Erdoğan seems intent on purging his enemies. The EU must use all its diplomatic powers to steer him away from reinstating capital punishment - 18th July
 * Theresa May has brought the Tory party together, but what will happen when she gets down to the nitty gritty of government? - The mandate question is going to nag away at her authority - 12th July
 * Will Nato’s warmer words prevent a new cold war? - After years of tension, the west has struck a new conciliatory note – and Russia’s tone has changed - 11th July
 * How will Boris Johnson’s departure change the Tory leadership contest? - Our writers discuss the effect on the runners and riders now that the favourite has quit the race - 30th June Jonathan Freedland, Zoe Williams, Mary Dejevsky and Mark Wallace
 * The future of the EU itself is in peril - The British vote gives all those with misgivings about the power of Brussels the possibility of a way out: either to bargain for new terms or to leave altogether - 25th June
 * Isolating Russia isn’t working. The west needs a new approach - When even cautious German politicians are questioning Nato’s ‘war-mongering’ actions, it’s clear that a new tack is required - 20th June
 * Who are this new breed of Russian football fans? - The fighting at Euro 2016 in Marseille was initially blamed on English hooligans then Russian thugs. Perhaps it’s best seen as a regrettable stage in the evolution of sporting self-assertion - 14th June
 * The supposed superiority of the UK intelligence agencies is a myth - Revelations that MI5 and MI6 were in conflict about practices such as rendition destroy the illusion that British spies are above protectionism and infighting - 2nd June
 * The supposed superiority of the UK intelligence agencies is a myth - Revelations that MI5 and MI6 were in conflict about practices such as rendition destroy the illusion that British spies are above protectionism and infighting - 1st June
 * Drones are not all bad – but what if Isis starts using them? - The muted reaction to the death of Taliban leader Mullah Akhtar Mansoor suggests remote killing has lost its shock value – for now - 25th May
 * How do people see Russia? Eurovision gave one answer - Ukraine triumphed – but the popular vote suggested a more nuanced view of Russia than has often been assumed - 16th May
 * When it comes to China, the Queen’s gaffe reveals some inconvenient truths - Following the Queen’s ‘very rude’ remarks about her Chinese visitors, the Palace is likely to clamp down on TV footage being released. What a pity - 11th May
 * North Korea might respond better to a less confrontational west - It’s possible that Pyongyang’s actions, such as the detention of BBC journalists, are down to fear – fuelled by its isolation from the outside world - 11th May
 * Why can’t all illnesses get the cancer treatment? - I hope the latest breast cancer breakthrough is genuine. But I also wish we paid as much attention to other severe conditions - 4th May
 * If BHS can fold, then how safe are M&S and John Lewis? - The problems that finally killed off British Home Stores could easily apply to other department stores we regard as institutions - 25th April
 * Tax transparency is just the start. Let’s publish payrolls too - After the Panama Papers revelations, there’s a move for openness – and why not include salaries? Keeping quiet about pay is how privilege perpetuates itself - 12th April
 * The Panama Papers show why Britain needs to get its house in order - David Cameron talks the talk about cleaning up international finance. Yet some of the biggest havens of dirty money are British territories and London property - 5th April
 * Don’t despair, a silent majority can still keep Britain in Europe - Brexit dominates the debate, but shouldn’t we also consider the benefits of a popular vote to stay. The whole atmosphere of the UK, and Europe, could change - 29th March
 * Saleh Abdeslam may be a terrorist, but his trial must be unimpeachable - The prosecution of a terrorist suspect in the Paris attacks offers the European Union an opportunity to show itself at its best - 21st March
 * Germany’s election result is a warning to Merkel – not a far-right triumph - With no mainstream outlet for discontent over migration, the real problem facing the chancellor is not AfD gains but the future effects of her deal with Turkey - 14th March
 * Who wants to give money to a charity they don’t trust? - The warning issued by the Charities Commission reflects growing public unease about the sector, following Olive Cooke’s death and the collapse of Kids Company - 1st March
 * This ceasefire deal could bring peace closer for Syria - Despite the west’s strident propaganda war with Russia, diplomacy still gives cause for hope - 25th February
 * The Pentagon has fired the first shot in a new arms race - The US is ramping up military spending to counter ‘Russian aggression’ – but what does that mean for Europe? - 10th February
 * We love European crime fiction yet kill the facts - Viewers addicted to continental noir drama such as The Killing and Spiral live under a virtual UK blackout on real-life news - 27th January
 * The Geneva refugee convention can’t cope with this crisis. Time for a rethink - The exodus from war-torn and poorer countries and pull of the EU have created a demand the world cannot meet - 19th January
 * Exiling Assad to Russia isn’t as crazy as it sounds - The problem of who would succeed Syria remains a huge one, but this idea raised by a German journalist is worth including in the upcoming talks - 14th January



Articles: 2015

 * To pay for the floods, we should raid military spending, not foreign aid - Contrary to the clamour from the right, using the army to help flooding victims makes far more sense than redirecting overseas aid - 29th December
 * Easter eggs at Christmas? It’s just wrong - With mince pies competing for shelf space with European delicacies year round, we’re losing the food traditions that connect us to our past - 28th December
 * The UN taking charge of Syria? There’s one big problem - Even if Syrians agreed it was a way to keep their country whole, an awkward question remains: why create a new mandate when previous attempts failed - 8th December
 * The case for airstrikes on Syria – our writers' verdicts - David Cameron addressed the House of Commons this morning on whether to join military action in Syria. Here, our columnists give their views - 26th November
 * The case for British airstrikes on Syria makes even less sense now - If the Paris attacks change anything, it should be to give fresh impetus to the Vienna peace talks. Unleashing our own firepower will only bolster Isis - 22nd November
 * Will the downing of a Russian fighter jet wreck Syria peace hopes? - For reasons old and new, an ingrained state of alert remains between Turkey and Russia. But both need to sign off on any agreement - 24th November
 * The trouble with diplomatic dining - Alcohol was the issue that scuppered a lunch planned for the French and Iranian presidents. It is a salutary reminder of the pitfalls of entertaining distinguished foreign visitors - 13th November
 * On foreign policy, Britannia doesn’t rule the waves: we’re hardly keeping afloat - A diplomatic report warns that British foreign policy is in crisis. We need to stop worrying about Europe and ensure we have a united front in global dealings - 10th November
 * Lisa Jardine and David Cesarani were just the kind of public intellectuals Britain needs - We have lost two distinguished British historians, who leave a legacy of profound cultural enrichment. They had much in common - 26th October
 * Leon Brittan: when did the police go from investigators to judge and jury? - The treatment of Leon Brittan and his family was a travesty. You don’t serve justice by tainting innocent people - 10th October
 * Whoever shot down flight MH17, Russia’s reputation is in tatters - We still don’t know for sure who caused the Malaysia Airlines catastrophe in Ukraine, but it has been costly for both the Kremlin and the rebels - 14th October
 * Putin wants to preserve Syria – this is not about Russia-US relations - The risk of accidental clash is real, but Russia’s first airstrikes signal the desire to be treated as a global player and to protect the Syrian state - 1st October
 * Northern Ireland needs to grow up, it can’t rely on London to keep the peace - As Stormont faces the threat of collapse, it’s no help to have Westminster standing by paternalistically - 1st September
 * I’m a Hillary Clinton fan. But I hope she bows out with grace - Clinton can win the Democratic nomination and make it all the way to the White House. But she would carry too much baggage to be effective - 18th August
 * How Kids Company’s unconventional approach contributed to its downfall - Camila Batmanghelidjh’s charity, now set to close, seemed to skate along without the standard checks. Its closeness to government raises questions about voluntary sector funding - 5th August
 * Vote for Jeremy Corbyn, and help raise the Lib Dems from the dead - The Lib Dems could be the real winners of the Labour leadership contest if it creates a more vacant centre ground - 29th July
 * A war on Isis is a hard sell: the well of trust is still poisoned by Iraq - The Cameron-May double act wraps up the threats to the UK in one – but the public may not be convinced - 21st July
 * We must fight the return of the slum landlord - How can 26 people live in one house in East Ham, you may ask? It’s down to a housing shortage, desperate people, and latter-day Peter Rachmans ready to take advantage - 26th June
 * Greece can be forgiven for looking to Russia, but it should beware - Putin may be smiling a big come-hither smile at Greece, while snarling at the EU. Still, the time for a greater Orthodox bloc has not, and will not, come - 24th March
 * Gold, glitz and glory: why a poisoning row at Crufts is no surprise - Behind the notion of a dastardly crime being committed against an Irish setter there’s real concern about the new glitzy breed of dog show - 10th March
 * If Britons want to join Isis, let them go - This is a free country, and the departure of the London schoolgirls – presumably for Syria – is not a cause for national breast-beating but a family matter - 24th February
 * In their cynicism about Putin, western diplomats are making the Ukrainian crisis worse - The Russian president has every reason to want the ceasefire to hold, but if the west continues to misread his motives there’s little chance of it happening - 19th February
 * A Libyan front in the war on Isis may not be all it seems - With the murder of 21 Egyptian Christians, it suddenly seems possible to envisage an arc of war across the Middle East. But Islamic State’s real power should not be exaggerated - 16th February
 * Just how hard can it be to purge prisons of drugs? - Chris Grayling's new zero-tolerance drive could finally see the interests of prison authorities and public converge - 26th January

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Articles: 2014

 * Britain must accept that Hong Kong is no longer a colony - The empire is over. British MPs preaching to China about democracy are a minor irritant to be swatted away - 2nd December
 * How this sandwich maker could attract a local workforce - Low pay offered by the Northants factory recruiting Hungarians has deterred many homegrown staff - 11th November
 * Angela Merkel has exposed David Cameron’s gravest failing as a politician - The prime minister suffers from an inability to ‘read’ foreigners – and it could lead to Britain leaving the EU - 4th November
 * Why is Britain sending troops to combat Ebola in Sierra Leone? - First thoughts: The Department for International Development would be a more appropriate agency to help provide emergency medical aid - 9th October
 * Tesco's dethronement has little to do with Teutonic usurpers - Blaming Aldi and Lidl lets other chains off the hook – Britain's supermarkets are not the best in the world - 24th September
 * Last year, Assad was the enemy. This year? We're making friends with Syria - First thoughts: The killing of one man – James Foley – has had the power to change British and US foreign policy in a cataclysmic way - 22nd August
 * It’s no longer only Christians who shape UK foreign policy - Britain is a multicultural nation and its minority communities are having an increasing influence on its voice in the world - 19th August
 * Europe must learn to deal with Moscow without US backing - In the new multipolar world, with the US sometimes on the sidelines, EU unity is essential for its approach to Russia - 24th July
 * All eyes are on Vladimir Putin’s reaction to the flight MH17 disaster - The Russian president caneither join international efforts to investigate the tragedy or he can choose obfuscation and denial - 19th July
 * Elizabeth Butler-Sloss is too close to the establishment to lead this abuse inquiry - First thoughts: The baroness has an impeccable CV but this is one job for which her establishment credentials should rule her out - 10th July
 * Fear, not ambition, is what fuels Moscow in Ukraine - The west has misread Russia's motivations in Ukraine, and in doing so risks provoking Putin - 7th July
 * Prince Charles has every right to a voice in how the UK is run - First thoughts: This is his country as much as ours, and doesn't appear to be an especially successful lobbyist, so why shouldn't he air his views? - 30th June
 * Are employers really worried about Britain's language skills? - The small print of the CBI's survey suggests that employers may not be so worried as their lobby group would like to suggest - 24th June
 * Great Britain Inc is failing - Too-complex government means ministers are not living up to a key test of power: simply making things work - 16th June
 * Does Bowe Bergdahl's release signal an end to the 'war on terror'? - The deal to swap a US soldier for five Taliban prisoners may be evidence of the pragmatism underlying Obama's foreign policy - 3rd June
 * Prince Charles's Putin remarks threaten to reignite tensions in Ukraine - First thoughts: The timing of the prince's comments apparently likening Putin to Hitler couldn't be worse, ahead of Ukraine's presidential elections on Sunday - 21st May
 * Labour got the right Miliband. But the party needs to lose an Ed - First thoughts: If Ed Miliband wants to recover from poor poll ratings and win the next general election, he must be brave and ditch Ed Balls - 13th May
 * Can South Africa's revolution move beyond the ANC? - South Africa has done many things right, but its post-apartheid politicians still need to develop a truly pluralist system
 * The South Korea ferry disaster is truly awful, but it is not murder - First thoughts: Any tragedy involving children will provoke intense emotions, but it's too easy to simply label the Sewol's crew 'killers' - 21st April
 * What next for Ukraine? - With Martin Woollacott and Keir Giles: Pro-Russian separatists are still in situ, and the interim president has hit out at Russian 'aggression'. Our panel discusses the country's immediate future - 14th April
 * News of a Russian arms buildup next to Ukraine is part of the propaganda war - First thoughts: To project strength, Nato requires a convincing enemy and a retreating Russia does not do the job - 11th April
 * Here's a shiny new £1 coin - what was that about the budget? - First thoughts: George Osborne's ploy to buy the public off with a threepenny-bit style pound may just work, and its cunning design could stop us gambling too - 19th March
 * The Ukraine crisis shines a light on the UK's lax attitudes to foreign money - Pressure for sanctions from Washington and Brussels may force London to think again about ill-gotten gains from the east - 10th March
 * Ukraine is now in a potentially revolutionary situation - This is no longer about east v west – and the descent into violence may be hard to reverse - 19th February
 * How international coverage missed the point of the Sochi opening ceremony - Forget about the fifth snowflake – the Olympic pageant tried to create a new, post-Soviet cultural canon – and it largely worked - 14th February
 * Calling all pensioners: it is time to stand up for your rights - Britain's state pension is miserly compared with Europe, and it is not a benefit: people have paid for it all their working lives - 7th January

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Articles: 2013

 * In a globalised, connected world, do we still need the Foreign Office? - Other government departments overlap with the FCO, and maintaining embassies is costly. Maybe it's time for a rethink - 30th December
 * Setback in Ukraine is a lesson for Brussels - The issue is far from settled but a more measured approach is needed - 1st December
 * the Iran nuclear deal should alarm us more than Israel's - Saudi Arabia feels double-crossed and is determined to contest a resurgent Iran. Could Europe replace the US in Riyadh's affections? - 26th November
 * Ukraine, Russia and the EU: does it have to be about brinkmanship? - An outdated ideology of confrontation is making Ukraine's journey towards EU membership a fraught – and dangerous – process - 20th November
 * 'Your call is valuable to us.' Well, now we know just how valuable - Charging us premium phone rates to call a government service line is scandalous when our taxes have already paid for it - 11th November
 * The Poundland ruling sends out the wrong message about workfare - The supreme court judgement leaves the impression that no obligations are attached to the receipt of benefits - 30th October
 * End the scourge of buy-to-let - It is time someone had the guts to stop this market-skewing practice - 26th October
 * It's not just the next generation. The middle classes are suffering already - The people hardest hit are the parents who work and save but still find that a comfortable life is out of reach - 14th October

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The Spectator:
Column name:

Remit/Info: International affairs (esp. Russia), the EU, the US; also UK politics and society

Section:

Role:

Pen-name:

Email:

Website: http://www.spectator.co.uk/author/marydejevsky/

Commissioning editor:

Day published:

Regularity:

Column format:

Average length:

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Articles: 2016

 * British universities are whipping up a mad boom that’s bound to go bust - Many are building vast glass palaces to take on more and more students - 14th May

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Articles: 2015

 * The war on pensioners - The average pensioner still has an income 25 per cent below the average worker. You wouldn’t guess that from the media - 14th November

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Articles: 2014

 * Why doesn't Russia have a Yad Vashem for the gulag? - One of the 20th century's great crimes is still awaiting a fitting memorial - 4th January

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Articles: 2013

 * Super-heads are a super-huge mistake - How many more resignations from super-heads do we need till we realise the system of parachuting top teachers into failing schools is a recipe for corruption? - 7th December
 * Has Germany confronted its Nazi past? Not where art is concerned - The discovery of 1,400 paintings in a Munich flat is only a fraction of a much bigger picture - 9th November
 * If nurses are really 'at breaking point', they should stop working 12-hour shifts - Doing a full week's work in three days is not in patients' interests - 5th October
 * Why Russia’s diplomats should learn swimming-pool etiquette - In foreign policy, Russia thrashes about like a badly socialised swimmer - 4th May

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News & updates:

 * Putin 2.0 What will the next six years be like? Will the opposition and the authorities find common language? What are the main challenges for Putin’s third term? CrossTalk with Mary Dejevsky, Ben Aris and John Laughland. 5th March 2012

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References:
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Links:

 * New Statesman book reviews