Annual subscription to Prospect Magazine online for only £24.00.
Full refund within 30 days if you're not completely satisfied.
page:
contents page
previous next
zoom out zoom in
thumbnails double page single page large double page
fit width
clip to blog
Go to page 20 Go to page 14 Go to page 44 Go to page 32 Go to page 16 Go to page 34 Go to page 13 Go to page 50 Go to page 27 Go to page 15 Go to page 40 Go to page 12
page:
contents page
previous next
zoom out zoom in
thumbnails double page single page large double page
fit width
clip to blog

ISSUE 141 DECEMBER 2007

Contributors to this issue

PHILIP BALL ’s novel The Sun and Moon Corrupted is forthcoming from Portobello

TOM CHATFIELD is assistant editor of Prospect

MARK COUSINS is the author of The Story of Film (Pavilion Books)

ROB GIFFORD is the London bureau chief for National Public Radio

DAVID GOLDBLATT is a writer, broadcaster and teacher

ALASDAIR GRAY ’s latest novel is Old Men in Love (Bloomsbury)

AC GRAYLING ’s latest book is Towards the Light (Bloomsbury)

DAVID HERMAN is a writer and television producer

CHRISTOPHER HIRD is joint managing director of Fulcrum Productions

LEO HORNAK is a microfinance consultant

RICHARD JENKYNS is a fellow of Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford University

ANATOLE KALETSKY is a Times columnist

NIBRAS KAZIMI is a visiting fellow at the Hudson Institute, Washington DC

IAN KEARNS is deputy director of the Institute for Public Policy Research

MARTIN KETTLE is a Guardian columnist

TIM KING is a writer living in France

CHARLOTTE LESLIE is the editor of the Bow Group magazine Crossbow

BEN LEWIS presents BBC4’s Art Safari

MATTHEW LOCKWOOD is a senior research fellow in climate change at IPPR

JAMES LOVELOCK is the author of The Revenge of Gaia (Penguin)

ROWAN MOORE is an architecture critic

ANDREW MORAVCSIK is a professor at Princeton’s Woodrow Wilson School

COLIN MURPHY is a journalist living in Dublin

JONATHAN RÉÉE holds a visiting position at Roehampton University

NICOLAS ROTHWELL is a special correspondent for the Australian

KAMILA SHAMSIE ’s most recent novel is Broken Verses (Bloomsbury)

ROBERT SKIDELSKY is professor of political economy, Warwick University

WILLIAM SKIDELSKY is deputy editor of Prospect

IAN STEWART is author of Why Beauty Is Truth: The History of Symmetry (Basic)

ROBERT WADE is a professor of political economy at the LSE

contents

Coverstory 34Taking sport seriously Sport has never been more important,but its meaning and appeal are still not taken seriously,at least in Britain.It is time for sport to enjoy the same cultural weight as the performing arts,says David Goldblatt,and to be judged by the normal standards of public life.

Opinions

12New thinking on nukes A nuclear weapons-free world is possible. Shouldn’t Gordon Brown push for it? IAN KEARNS

13The bias against boys The feminisation of society is partly to blame for boys doing badly at school. CHARLOTTE LESLIE

14Marxist populism Perry Anderson has embraced Eurosceptic populism. ANDREW MORAVCSIK

15The genre divide The gulf between genre and literary fiction remains wide. TOM CHATFIELD

16Pakistan’s military tycoons The Pakistani military clings to power partly to safeguard its economic empire. KAMILA SHAMSIE

Debate

20Is global finance out of control? Have global deregulation and the ascendancy of finance been good or bad for the world economy? ROBERT WADE VSANATOLE KALETSKY

Special report

CITIES AND CLIMATE CHANGE

27Cooler cities Many cities have far more ambitious environmental aims than do national governments. But how are these aims to be realised? MATTHEW LOCKWOOD

Interview

32Yvette Cooper At the start of the most ambitious housebuilding programme for a generation, housing minister Yvette Cooper talks to Prospect . ROWAN MOORE & MATTHEW LOCKWOOD

Essays

40Aboriginal surprise In June, the Australian government tore up 30 years of social policy towards Aborigines in the Northern Territory. NICOLAS ROTHWELL

44Do we need a literary canon? We need a common culture, but it is wrong to think it should be based on a canon. Shared references must evolve more organically. RICHARD JENKYNS

Witness

50The Silicon Valley of China The inland city of Hefei is almost unknown outside China, but it aspires to be the country’s hi-tech centre by 2020. ROB GIFFORD

2 Prospect DECEMBER2007