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Time Magazine International Edition

Apr 25 2022
Magazine

Time Magazine International Edition is the go-to news magazine for what is happening around the globe. You can rely on TIME's award winning journalists for analysis and insight into the latest developments in politics, business, health, science, society and entertainment.

WHAT YOU SAID ABOUT

FOR THE RECORD

A CRIME SCENE • Russia’s attacks on civilians could change the course of the war

UKRAINE IS THE WORLD’S CRUCIBLE

NEWS TICKER

MIGRANTS AWAIT THE END OF PANDEMIC-ERA BORDER POLICY

LAND PROTEST

MILESTONES

KETANJI BROWN JACKSON • Supreme Court first

PARENTS IN CHINA PROTEST COVID-19 CHILD SEPARATION

BLENDING NEW FLAVORS IN AN ANCIENT CUP

MELLON FOUNDATION HEAD ELIZABETH ALEXANDER ON THE TRAYVON GENERATION AND THE POWER OF MONUMENTS

ESTONIAN CIVILIANS PREPARE TO DEFEND THEMSELVES

PRIME MINISTER KAJA KALLAS

THE LOOMING FOOD CRISIS

AFTER IMRAN KHAN, PAKISTAN RESETS

A NEW DRUG EPIDEMIC

THE CORONAVIRUS BRIEF

THE D.C. BRIEF

WHY COLLEGE REJECTIONS AREN’T ALWAYS BAD NEWS

FOLLOW THE MONEY • I learned the hard way what Russia’s president cares about most

THE STORIES OF OUR SORROW • Roughly 1 million people have died of COVID-19 in the U.S. Each death was more than a number

WHY WE MUST LOOK AT GRIEF

REMEMBERING LOST LOVED ONES • The pandemic has affected us all, but certain groups have suffered disproportionately throughout it. TIME spoke with three people who lost family members to the same devastating disease—COVID-19—but under very different circumstances

EARTH, INC. • For better or for worse, corporations are more involved than ever in how the world handles the climate crisis

THE BUSINESS OF OUR FUTURE

CLIMATE GOES PRIVATE • PLANET EARTH’S FUTURE NOW RESTS IN THE HANDS OF BIG BUSINESS

MAKE MINING GREEN • AN EXECUTIVE TRIES TO REGULATE HER OWN INDUSTRY—FOR THE EARTH’S SAKE

CRACKING THE CORPORATE CODE • A TIME ANALYSIS OF PUBLIC FILINGS REVEALS WHAT BUSINESS LEADERS REALLY THINK ABOUT CLIMATE

TRIBES GET SERIOUS ABOUT SOLAR • TO ENTER THE CLEAN-ENERGY MARKET, GOVERNMENT GRANTS ARE NOT ENOUGH

IDEAS FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE • FOUR NEW MEMBERS OF TIME’S 2030 COMMITTEE—PART OF A PROJECT MARKING THIS DECADE’S PROGRESS TOWARD A BETTER WORLD—OFFER SOLUTIONS FOR CHANGE

FLIPPING THE FARM • AN INVESTMENT FUND FINDS PROFIT IN HELPING AMERICAN FARMERS PLANT A GREENER CROP

HOMECOMING • Some Guatemalans are rethinking the economics of migration

MR. EVERYTHING • Shohei Ohtani is reviving the national pastime

COPS AS ROBBERS • The minds behind The Wire return to Baltimore for a new series based on a true story of corrupt crime fighting

AN ENORMOUS WASTE OF SOMEONE’S TALENT

A TENDER FAIRY TALE FROM FRANCE

A VIKING SAGA FOR THE AGES, OR JUST A SATURDAY AFTERNOON

JENNIFER EGAN’S WORLD WITHOUT PRIVACY

GOOD TV COMES TO THOSE WHO WAIT

KERSTIN FORSBERG • The Peruvian marine biologist on our ocean planet, working with fishermen, and the miracle of manta rays


Expand title description text
Frequency: Every other week Pages: 102 Publisher: Time Magazine UK Ltd. Edition: Apr 25 2022

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: April 16, 2022

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

News & Politics

Languages

English

Time Magazine International Edition is the go-to news magazine for what is happening around the globe. You can rely on TIME's award winning journalists for analysis and insight into the latest developments in politics, business, health, science, society and entertainment.

WHAT YOU SAID ABOUT

FOR THE RECORD

A CRIME SCENE • Russia’s attacks on civilians could change the course of the war

UKRAINE IS THE WORLD’S CRUCIBLE

NEWS TICKER

MIGRANTS AWAIT THE END OF PANDEMIC-ERA BORDER POLICY

LAND PROTEST

MILESTONES

KETANJI BROWN JACKSON • Supreme Court first

PARENTS IN CHINA PROTEST COVID-19 CHILD SEPARATION

BLENDING NEW FLAVORS IN AN ANCIENT CUP

MELLON FOUNDATION HEAD ELIZABETH ALEXANDER ON THE TRAYVON GENERATION AND THE POWER OF MONUMENTS

ESTONIAN CIVILIANS PREPARE TO DEFEND THEMSELVES

PRIME MINISTER KAJA KALLAS

THE LOOMING FOOD CRISIS

AFTER IMRAN KHAN, PAKISTAN RESETS

A NEW DRUG EPIDEMIC

THE CORONAVIRUS BRIEF

THE D.C. BRIEF

WHY COLLEGE REJECTIONS AREN’T ALWAYS BAD NEWS

FOLLOW THE MONEY • I learned the hard way what Russia’s president cares about most

THE STORIES OF OUR SORROW • Roughly 1 million people have died of COVID-19 in the U.S. Each death was more than a number

WHY WE MUST LOOK AT GRIEF

REMEMBERING LOST LOVED ONES • The pandemic has affected us all, but certain groups have suffered disproportionately throughout it. TIME spoke with three people who lost family members to the same devastating disease—COVID-19—but under very different circumstances

EARTH, INC. • For better or for worse, corporations are more involved than ever in how the world handles the climate crisis

THE BUSINESS OF OUR FUTURE

CLIMATE GOES PRIVATE • PLANET EARTH’S FUTURE NOW RESTS IN THE HANDS OF BIG BUSINESS

MAKE MINING GREEN • AN EXECUTIVE TRIES TO REGULATE HER OWN INDUSTRY—FOR THE EARTH’S SAKE

CRACKING THE CORPORATE CODE • A TIME ANALYSIS OF PUBLIC FILINGS REVEALS WHAT BUSINESS LEADERS REALLY THINK ABOUT CLIMATE

TRIBES GET SERIOUS ABOUT SOLAR • TO ENTER THE CLEAN-ENERGY MARKET, GOVERNMENT GRANTS ARE NOT ENOUGH

IDEAS FOR A SUSTAINABLE FUTURE • FOUR NEW MEMBERS OF TIME’S 2030 COMMITTEE—PART OF A PROJECT MARKING THIS DECADE’S PROGRESS TOWARD A BETTER WORLD—OFFER SOLUTIONS FOR CHANGE

FLIPPING THE FARM • AN INVESTMENT FUND FINDS PROFIT IN HELPING AMERICAN FARMERS PLANT A GREENER CROP

HOMECOMING • Some Guatemalans are rethinking the economics of migration

MR. EVERYTHING • Shohei Ohtani is reviving the national pastime

COPS AS ROBBERS • The minds behind The Wire return to Baltimore for a new series based on a true story of corrupt crime fighting

AN ENORMOUS WASTE OF SOMEONE’S TALENT

A TENDER FAIRY TALE FROM FRANCE

A VIKING SAGA FOR THE AGES, OR JUST A SATURDAY AFTERNOON

JENNIFER EGAN’S WORLD WITHOUT PRIVACY

GOOD TV COMES TO THOSE WHO WAIT

KERSTIN FORSBERG • The Peruvian marine biologist on our ocean planet, working with fishermen, and the miracle of manta rays


Expand title description text