Johann Hari
Johann Hari has reported from Iraq, Israel/Palestine, the Congo, the Central African Republic, Venezuela, Peru and the US, and his journalism has appeared in publications all over the world. The youngest person to be nominated for the Orwell Prize for political writing, in 2003 he won the Press Gazette Young Journalist of the Year Award and in 2007 Amnesty International named him Newspaper Journalist of the Year. He is a contributing editor of Attitude magazine and published his first book, God Save the Queen?, in 2003.
Historian's dark side
Johann Hari: The work of Andrew Roberts elaborately defends the crimes of a white man's empire
Recently by Johann Hari
Johann Hari: We've forgotten the force which really drives political change
Wednesday, 29 July 2009
When you are just one person sitting on a warming planet – when you see economies collapsing, wars raging, and reasons for fear on every corner – how should you react? What can you do? The current cluster of crises has stirred mood-responses that you can hear in every bar and coffee shop. It's worth looking at them, because beyond their siren messages, there is a road to real change that is being neglected.
Johann Hari: Please, dear novelists, get real
Friday, 24 July 2009
I long to drag them to a rundown estate in Bradford or a climate change protest camp
Stop the Br�no-bashing
Wednesday, 22 July 2009
Johann Hari: The joke isn't on gay people; it's on bigots who believe he is real and typical of gays
Johann Hari: The other 9/11 returns to haunt Latin America
Friday, 3 July 2009
It was inevitable that the people at the top would fight to preserve their privileges
Johann Hari: Almost everywhere is touched by the Stonewall riots now
Wednesday, 1 July 2009
Homosexuality happens everywhere, so gays fight to be themselves everywhere
Johann Hari: When divorce is the wiser option
Friday, 26 June 2009
Cameron's solution to a 'broken Britain' would harm children and break us more
A fight for the Amazon that should inspire the world
Wednesday, 24 June 2009
Johann Hari:: The uprising in the Amazon is more urgent than Iran's - it will determine the future of the planet
Johann Hari: Widdecombe would win my vote
Friday, 19 June 2009
Her politics are the polar opposite of mine. But she is the best candidate for Speaker
Johann Hari: They were great at first – but then the creativity dries up
Friday, 19 June 2009
Last year, I had my own brief experiment with smart drugs. I felt burned out after a series of long foreign assignments, and my brain was rustily chug-chugging along at half-speed. That's when I first read about a drug being billed as "Viagra for the brain" – not Ritalin, but Provigil, a brand name for modafinil.
Johann Hari: Will the looming war between Iran and Israel now be averted?
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
Are we witnessing an anti-1979 – a democratic uprising against the Ayatollahs by the grandchildren of the revolution? On the streets of Tehran, many of the massed millions are chanting: "We will die, but count our votes." The religious police are trying to tear-gas and truncheon this cry into submission, with the possibility of a Tehran Tiananmen hanging in the city's smog. But for today, the secret policemen are in panic and the Ayatollahs are in retreat.
Columnist Comments
• Alan Watkins: Mr Cameron's 'cursing' won't harm him
The Conservative leader's ahead of the game but only because voters are, um, hacked off with Gordon Brown
• Rupert Cornwell: Go on, take a trip to Cockroach Hall of Fame
Some are majestic, others weird, but halls of fame in the US are a great excuse to get off the freeway
• Sarah Sands: Jude must learn the first Law of affairs
The appeal to Jude Law of playing Hamlet must have been the absence of vulgarity
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