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John Lloyd

  • Sunday, 5 January, 2025
    Populism in Europe
    It is misleading to tar all Europe’s ‘new right’ parties with one brush

    Some movements are correctly labelled extremist but others have a better claim to democratic credentials

  • Wednesday, 2 August, 2023
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    The Lost Future by Jan Zielonka — a world without borders

    A bold dissection of humanity’s collective challenges poses difficult questions about global democracy

    A yellow sign next to a  muddy track through forest
  • Monday, 19 June, 2023
    Populism
    The New Right is on a roll in Europe

    Italy’s Giorgia Meloni is among leaders enthusiastic about the ‘national conservatism’ seen in Britain

    Giorgia Meloni wears a white blouse and pink suit jacket
  • Friday, 18 March, 2022
    ReviewBiography and memoir
    Playing with Fire — Maria Yudina, the dissident pianist who survived Stalin

    Elizabeth Wilson’s meticulous biography examines the fame, friendships and extraordinary life of a fearless performer

    A grainy black-and-white photograph of a young woman at a desk
  • Friday, 9 April, 2021
    Scottish independence
    The push for independence is turning off Scots business

    A widening gulf separates entrepreneurs from nationalist ‘conviction politicians’ such as Nicola Sturgeon

    Jonathan McHugh illustration of John Lloyd column ‘The push for independence is turning off Scots business’
  • Thursday, 29 October, 2020
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    The Upswing — can America reclaim its lost social cohesion?

    Robert Putnam’s history traces the ups and downs of US job security, distribution of wealth and community values

  • Tuesday, 10 December, 2019
    Scottish National party
    SNP’s domination of Scotland is under threat

    Concerns about police and education quality rise as former leader faces assault trial

    INVERURIE, SCOTLAND - APRIL 18: (EDITORS NOTE: This image is a re-crop of #470190946) SNP Leader Nicola Sturgeon and Alex Salmond campaign in the Gordon constituency on April 18, 2015 in Inverurie, Scotland. The First Minister joined Alex Salmond to highlight the fact that only the SNP represent all parts of Scotland. (Photo by Jeff J Mitchell/Getty Images)
  • Friday, 8 November, 2019
    ObituaryVladimir Bukovsky
    Vladimir Bukovsky, human rights activist and writer, 1942-2019

    Dissident who shone a light on abuse in the Soviet system

    Nov. 11, 1978 - Vladimir Bukovsky Broadcasts to Russia. Vladimir Bukovsky, the Soviet dissident now studying biology at King's College, Cambridge, reading extracts from his autobiography ''To Build Caste: My Life as a Dissenter'' for the Russian service of the BBC. The first program was broadcast last night. (Credit Image: © Keystone Press Agency/Keystone USA via ZUMAPRESS.com)
  • Wednesday, 17 July, 2019
    FT Books Essay
    The roots of Putin’s power machine

    Four new books examine the leader’s hold over Russia through the lens of history

    April 26, 2019 - Beijing, China: Russian President Vladimir Putin before the meeting with Myanmar's Foreign Minister and State Counselor Aung San Suu Kyi at The Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation. (Dmitry Azarov/Kommersant/Polaris) Credit: Polaris / eyevine For further information please contact eyevine tel: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709 e-mail: info@eyevine.com www.eyevine.com
  • Friday, 15 March, 2019
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    What constitutes civilised? The challenge to western values

    Two new books lament the west’s decline and the threat from rival powers

    CHONGQING, CHINA - FEBRUARY 17: Citizens walk through red lanterns before Lantern Festival on February 17, 2019 in Chongqing, China. People eat Tangyuan (glutinous rice balls), solve lantern riddles, watch lion dances and enjoy drum performances to celebrate the upcoming Lantern Festival, which falls on February 19 this year. (Photo by Ran Mengjun/VCG via Getty Images)
  • Thursday, 31 January, 2019
    ReviewNon-Fiction
    Merchants of Truth by Jill Abramson — when news goes viral

    A study of the disruption of journalism reveals how traditional lines are being crossed

    Mandatory Credit: Photo by Sipa USA/REX/Shutterstock (7429532a) The Wall Street Journal, New York Post, Daily News, The New York Times newspaper front pages report on the previous day's election featuring Donald Trump on the front cover Reaction to the US presidential election, New York, USA - 09 Nov 2016 Because of Hillary Clinton conceding around 3:00 AM most papers did not or could not make a morning edition with the exception of the News Corp. papers, the Wall Street Journal and the New York Post and the New York Daily News
  • Friday, 9 November, 2018
    ReviewPolitical books
    Understanding the populist voter

    John Lloyd considers two valuable books showing that people who are swayed by populist parties aren’t necessarily bigoted and that their fears are real

    A union flag is displayed on a house at Jaywick near Clacton-on-Sea, a town in eastern England, where 70 percent of people voted on June 23, 2016 to leave the European Union, Britain August 23, 2016. REUTERS/Neil Hall SEARCH "CLACTON BREXIT" FOR THIS STORY. SEARCH "WIDER IMAGE" FOR ALL STORIES. - S1AETYPCEGAA
  • Thursday, 20 September, 2018
    ReviewLife & Arts
    Dreaming of England: how to make sense in a time of upheaval

    A profound sense of loss flows through Jason Cowley’s essays on the state of the nation

    Nigel Farage
  • Friday, 22 June, 2018
    ReviewFT Books Essay
    Secrets and spies: can espionage ever be justified?

    Civilisations have engaged in espionage since biblical times — but the ethics of spying remain as murky as ever

    XKH157645 Magritte and the Spies, 1971 (acrylic on canvas) by Equipo Cronica (The Cronica Group) (20th century); 122x122 cm; Hamburger Kunsthalle, Hamburg, Germany; (add.info.: worked primarily against Franco\'s regime;); NOT TO BE USED IN FRANCE AS CARDS, POSTERS OR POSTCARDS; Spanish,  in copyright.
									
									PLEASE NOTE: This image is protected by the artist\'s copyright which needs to be cleared by you. If you require assistance in clearing permission we will be pleased to help you.
  • Tuesday, 5 June, 2018
    ObituaryMedia
    Philip Bassett, journalist, 1954-2018

    Leading chronicler of UK labour and industry at the FT who became Labour government adviser

    Mandatory Credit: Photo by David Hartley/REX/Shutterstock (335446a) Baroness Symmons and Philip Bassett WEDDING OF BARONESS SYMMONDS TO PHILIP BASSETT VERHAM DEAN HAMPSHIRE BRITAIN - 14 APR 2001
  • Thursday, 8 February, 2018
    ReviewFT Books Essay
    The invention of Scotland

    John Lloyd finds nationalist certainties dissolving along the byways of literary history and the ‘Debatable Land’

    Bannockburn Live festivities, commemorating the 700 year anniversary of the Battle Of Bannockburn in which King Robert the Bruce and the Scots army defeated the English army under King Edward II, Bannockburn near Stirling, Scotland, Saturday 28th June 2014. credit Jeremy Sutton-Hibbert
  • Thursday, 28 December, 2017
    German politics
    2017 saw Europe’s mainstream centre shut out in the cold

    Public spending with broad support for capitalism is a consensus that no longer holds

    BERLIN, GERMANY - SEPTEMBER 24: German Social Democrat (SPD, C) and chancellor candidate Martin Schulz talks at the stage with State Premier of Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania Manuela Schwesig (2L), German Family Minister Katarina Barley and German Labour and Social Minister Andrea Nahles (2R) after election results that give the party 21% of the vote, giving it a second place finish, in German federal elections on September 24, 2017 in Berlin, Germany. German Chancellor and Christian Democrat (CDU) Angela Merkel is seeking a fourth term and coming weeks will likely be dominated by negotiations between parties over the next coalition government. (Photo by Maja Hitij/Getty Images)
  • Friday, 27 October, 2017
    Life & Arts
    Dons, donors and the murky business of funding universities

    Oxford University has long relied on deep-pocketed donors, but should some be turned away?

  • Monday, 14 August, 2017
    ReviewLife & Arts
    A chilling portrait of the workings of the world’s mafias

    The forensic account of the world’s mafias, from Japan’s Yakuza to Italy’s ’Ndrangheta

    The Godfather...From left to right, Salvatore Corsitto as Bonasera, James Caan as Santino 'Sonny' Corleone and  Marlon Brando (1924 - 2004) as Don Vito Corleone in 'The Godfather', 1972. Bonasera asks Don Corleone to avenge the brutal rape of his daughter. (Photo by Silver Screen Collection/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
  • Thursday, 25 May, 2017
    ReviewFT Books Essay
    The truth about the post-truth age

    Journalists are rightly worried about fake news and ‘alternative facts’ — but our new world has much in common with the old

    WORCESTER, ENGLAND - MAY 16: Boris Johnson MParrives in Stafford to board the Vote Leave, Brexit Battle Bus on May 17, 20016 in Stafford, England. Boris Johnson and the Vote Leave campaign are touring the UK in their Brexit Battle Bus. The campaign is hoping to persuade voters to back leaving the European Union in the Referendum on the 23rd June 2016. (Photo by Christopher Furlong/Getty Images)
  • Friday, 24 March, 2017
    Brexit
    The ties of affection that bind Scotland to the Union

    May’s stance gives SNP a new call to arms, but the case for independence is unclear

    Artwork for FTWeekend comment - issue dated 25.03.17
  • Friday, 3 March, 2017
    ReviewLife & Arts
    Mastering the Past by Ellen Hinsey — the return of history

    How the high hopes of early-1990s central Europe gave way to creeping authoritarianism

  • Thursday, 19 January, 2017
    Life & Arts
    Secrets and lies: intelligence and the media in the Trump era

    Spymasters speak to the FT about truth, transparency and state power

  • Tuesday, 3 January, 2017
    ObituaryUK politics
    John Berger, author and critic, 1926-2017

    Radical communicator of hidden power in art

    FRANCE - OCTOBER 11: John Berger, close-up in Menerbes, France On October 11, 2008-British writer, John Berger. (Photo by Brice TOUL/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images)
  • Thursday, 29 December, 2016
    Geopolitics
    The left might be ailing, but it is not dead yet

    There is ground to be regained in the west from the populist right

    SANTA MONICA, CA - JUNE 07:  Democratic presidential candidate Senator Bernie Sanders (D-VT) speaks to supporters at an election-night rally on June 7, 2016 in Santa Monica, California. Hillary Clinton held an early lead in today's California primary.  (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
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