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.
Johann Hari: The worst thing about Ashcroft is that his behaviour is legal
Contrary to the claims of apologists, there is nothing inevitable about tax exiles
Recently by Johann Hari
Fat cats and evangelicals: what a Tory win would really mean
Thursday, 25 February 2010
Johann Hari: With Cameron in power, largely unnoticed shifts will affect all our lives.
Ignore the spin – the Tory party hasn't changed
Friday, 19 February 2010
Johann Hari: Cameron can tuck away party on a poster, but not in parliament
Obama's secret prisons in Afghanistan endanger us all
Friday, 12 February 2010
Johann Hari: He was elected in part to drag us out of this trap. Instead, he's dragging us further in.
Johann Hari: There's real hope from Haiti and it's not what you expect
Friday, 5 February 2010
When people live so close to the edge, even small price increases can break them
Washington corruption is smothering US future
Friday, 29 January 2010
Johann Hari: How do you regulate banks effectively, if the Senate is owned by Wall Street?
The age of the killer robot is no longer a sci-fi fantasy
Friday, 22 January 2010
Johann Hari: You can't appeal to robots for mercy or empathy - or punish them afterwards.
Why Stephanie Beacham is a model for us all
Wednesday, 20 January 2010
Johann Hari: A woman's life doesn't have to end at 60 – as the star of Celebrity Big Brother is proving
Cameronomics: tried in Ireland - and the result?
Friday, 15 January 2010
Johann Hari: The Celtic Tiger had its claws ripped out, and it's shaking at the back of the cage.
Johann Hari: A brave step – will the Tories follow?
Wednesday, 13 January 2010
Under the current Labour Government, there has been a stunning sweep of progress for gay people – with civil partnerships, an end to Section 28, and openly gay people in the Army and the Government. The culture of Britain has been changed forever, and for the better.
We don't need this culture of overwork
Friday, 8 January 2010
Johann Hari: Britain now has the longest work hours in the developed world after the US.
Columnist Comments
• Dominic Lawson: Carers deserve better than this
It is depressingly easy to imagine how this initiative got forgotten
• Steve Richards: Truly Brown is the great survivor
No one can survive as long as the PM without having a few epic strengths
• Mary Dejevsky: Asylum system is not fit for purpose
Deportation after many appeals is at least as cruel as summary refusal
Most popular in Opinion
Read
1 Steve Richards: Truly Brown is the great survivor
2 Dominic Lawson: Carers deserve better than this diversion of their money
3 Robert Fisk: Once again, a nation walks through fire to give the West its 'democracy'
4 Yasmin Alibhai-Brown: British Muslims are running out of friends
5 Mary Dejevsky: The British asylum system is still not fit for purpose
6 Simon Carr: Who's telling the truth? I've no idea
7 Letters: New leaderships for Muslims
8 Robert Fisk: Someone remembers this atrocity at last – to Obama's dismay
9 Bruce Anderson: Nothing incriminates Mr Brown like his contempt for the Army
Emailed
1 Dominic Lawson: Carers deserve better than this diversion of their money
2 Robert Fisk: Once again, a nation walks through fire to give the West its 'democracy'
3 Leading article: Disclosure is not always in the interests of justice
5 Ged Bailes: Some fears cannot be overcome
6 John Lichfield: A lesson, son, in crisis and paradox
7 John Rentoul: Brown puts a tick by War and moves on
8 Melanie McFadyean: The scandal that is Yarl's Wood
9 Niall Ferguson: What the British Empire did for the world
10 Robert Fisk’s World: The true eloquence of letters from the front
Commented
1Bruce Anderson: Nothing incriminates Mr Brown like his contempt for the Army
2Labour's scramble to launch �11bn spree
3Civil servants stage strike over redundancy pay
4MPs to investigate Lord Ashcroft's peerage
5Philip Hensher: Why don't we put animals on trial?
6The bargain chain store that bought up Britain
7Tories' economist criticises party's plan for cuts
8Humans <u>must</u> be to blame for climate change, say scientists
9Britain must not retreat into itself after Iraq war says Foreign Secretary David Miliband