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Reactionary Democracy

Ben Margulies reviews a book that examines the complex politics of racism that is at play in some of the major democracies of the developed world.

Being at Large

Sam Mickey reviews a book that interrogates freedom in the age of alternative facts.

HKRB Essays: The Long Goodbye

As the UK government signals a potential ‘path to citizenship’ to nearly 3 million potential Hong Kong BNOs, and Trump starts the process of revoking Hong Kong’s special treatment, journalist and cultural historian Stuart Walton reflects on public and private histories.

Vigil: Hong Kong on the Brink

Historian Jeff Wasserstrom shares with Daniel C. Tsang his historically tempered observations about Hong Kong.

Found in Transition

Ka-Lee Wong reviews an assessment of Hong Kong and its culture two decades after its reversion to China.

Chernobyl: History of a Tragedy

Sasha Dovzhyk on the haunting banality of Europe’s biggest nuclear catastrophe.

I Have Become the Tide

As the Bharatiya Janata Party looks set to take a general election majority in an India increasingly hostile to minorities, Ragini Mohite reviews Githa Hariharan’s important novel on caste inequality and Dalit experience

Why Does Patriarchy Persist?

Ophelia Tung discusses the necessity of loss and vulnerability to the resistance of patriarchy.

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