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ISSUE 135 JUNE 2007
Contributors to this issue
JULIAN BAGGINI is the author of Welcome to Everytown (Granta Books)
PHILIP BALL is a science writer and the author of The Devil’s Doctor (Arrow)
DEREK BROWER is a journalist who covers oil, gas and energy politics
LESLEY CHAMBERLAIN is the author of Nietzsche in Turin (Quartet)
NICHOLAS CLEE is a former editor of the Bookseller
PAUL COLLIER is sub-warden of St Antony’s College, Oxford University
MARK COUSINS is the author of The Story of Film (Pavilion Books)
JASON COWLEY is a senior editor at the Observer
WILLIAM DAVIES is a sociologist and policy analyst
ROBERT DRUMMOND is a psychiatrist
PETINA GAPPAH is a writer and lawyer. She lives and works in Geneva
CARLO GÉBLER ’s play Henry & Harriet premiered at the Cathedral arts festival
AC GRAYLING ’s most recent book is Against All Gods (Oberon Books)
ROBERT HAZELL is professor of government and the constitution at UCL
CHRISTOPHER HIRD is joint managing director of Fulcrum Productions
ERIC KAUFMANN is a lecturer in politics and sociology at Birkbeck College
NIBRAS KAZIMI is a visiting fellow at the Hudson Institute, Washington
TIM KING is a writer living in France
RICHARD LAYARD was director of the LSE’s Centre for Economic Performance
BEN LEWIS presents BBC4’s Art Safari
SHIV MALIK is a freelance journalist. He is writing a book on British terrorism
DAVID MCWILLIAMS is the author of The Pope’s Children: Ireland’s New Elite (Pan)
PHILIP OLTERMANN co-edited How I Write: The Secret Lives of Authors (Rizzoli)
MICHAEL PREST is a freelance writer specialising in business and economics
JONATHAN RÉE is a freelance historian and philosopher
WILLIAM SKIDELSKY is deputy editor of Prospect
IAN STEWART is author of Why Beauty Is Truth: The History of Symmetry (Basic)
ERIK TARLOFF is a novelist and writer
BELLA THOMAS is programme director at the Ax:son Johnson Foundation
contents
Coverstory My brother the bomber What turned Mohammad Sidique Khan,a softly spoken youth worker,into the mastermind of 7/7? Shiv Malikspent months in a Leeds suburb getting to know Khan’s brother.A complex and disturbing story of the bomber’s radicalisation emerged.
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Opinions
14March of the HiBrits For 50 years, the children of Irish immigrants have been the most important innovators in England’s popular culture. DAVID MCWILLIAMS
15Gordon’s go Tony Blair’s departure leaves much constitutional business unresolved. It’s up to Gordon Brown to finish the job.
ROBERT HAZELL
16Against unhappiness Paul Ormerod splits hairs over methodology. People want to be happy, politicians should help them. RICHARD LAYARD
17Defending Hodge The belief that those who have lived in a community longest should have housing priority isn’t racist.
JULIAN BAGGINI
18Challenging Chomsky Universal grammar is the most important theory in linguistics. Has the language of one tribe now disproved it?
PHILIP OLTERMANN
19An unusual oilman John Browne turned BP into the oil industry’s leanest machine, but his costcutting now looks like a liability.
DEREK BROWER
Essays
42For richer and for poorer Two new books offer contrasting explanations for why some countries fail to develop: one blames culture, the other trade liberalisation. Though both analyses are flawed, neither can be dismissed. PAUL COLLIER
48The democracy of Don Quixote Novelists have always turned their hands to essays. The two forms share an inherent pluralism and scepticism that makes them natural allies of democracy. JONATHAN RÉE
Witness
52A Cuban death rehearsal With Castro apparently on the verge of death, I returned to Cuba to visit old friends. Life for most Cubans remains harsh. Yet western visitors continue to romanticise the place. BELLA THOMAS
Special report
57Tax credits: the success and failure Gordon Brown’s tax credits policy has directed billions to the low paid. But the failure of the policy’s architects to consider its real-world application has severely hampered delivery.
WILLIAM DAVIES
4 Prospect JUNE 2007