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Membership

September 2024

  • Katharine Viner

    One year of Guardian Europe: different stories through a new lens

    Katharine Viner
    On 20 September 2023, the Guardian launched a new digital edition for a continent in the grip of dramatic political and social change. This is what we’ve learned so far – and how you can help us do more

February 2023

  • Workers at a mass grave in a forest on the outskirts of Izium

    The Guardian picture essay
    A year of war in Ukraine as witnessed by Guardian photographers – photo essay

    Photojournalists Alessio Mamo, Anastasia Taylor-Lind, Ed Ram and Anastasia Vlasova have covered the situation in Ukraine since the Russian invasion last February. We hear from them about their experiences

January 2023

  • An illustration of a bird in a red puffa coat juggling a tablet, salad, book, video and  stroking a cat.

    The Guardian’s New Year quiz 2023: how do you like your news in the morning?

    Are you a curious cockatoo, a retro raven, a story starling, or a newsflash nightingale? Take our quiz to find out which parts of Guardian journalism are most suited to your habits

December 2022

  • Guardian Branding

    What do you get when you support the Guardian?

    Answer: unlimited app access, ad-free reading, newsroom gossip – and the reassurance that you’re funding independent, open, trustworthy journalism in slippery times

September 2022

  • George Monbiot

    Guardian climate pledge 2022
    Earth is under threat, yet you would scarcely know it

    George Monbiot
    Unlike most of the media, the Guardian resists political or commercial influence in order to keep the climate crisis front and centre

December 2021

  • From groundbreaking investigations to insults from Donald Trump, just some of the 250 or so Inside the Guardian articles published since 2015.

    Inside the Guardian
    Inside the Guardian: six years of candour, courage, and craft

    We revisit favourite contributions as our series on life behind the news agenda comes to an end
  • West Ham United v Tottenham Hotspur - Premier League<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - OCTOBER 24: 'No Room for Racism' is displayed on the digital screen during the Premier League match between West Ham United and Tottenham Hotspur at London Stadium on October 24, 2021 in London, England. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)

    Inside the Guardian
    Reporting on racism: ‘There are days it feels we are getting somewhere’

    Three of the Guardian’s sports writers reflect on the role of journalism in bringing about change, on and off the pitch
  • hacker scam phishing attack during covid19 coronavirus pandemic cyber security concept<br>2BJP24C hacker scam phishing attack during covid19 coronavirus pandemic cyber security concept

    Inside the Guardian
    Helping readers on the consumer desk: ‘We’re canaries in the coalmine’

    Our consumer affairs editor reflects on a year spent wrestling with emerging Covid scams and Brexit logjams

November 2021

  • Armed Boers<br>1st January 1900: A Boer picket on Spion Kop, Ladysmith. (Photo by Van Hoepen/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) white;format landscape;male;weapon;gun;ammunition;Africa;H 8670;H/WAR

    Guardian 200
    The Guardian editorial: how does a newspaper decide what it thinks?

  • Red Bull x Mangrove Truck At Notting Hill Carnival<br>LONDON, ENGLAND - AUGUST 26: Nella Rose attends Notting Hill Carnival 2019 on August 26, 2019 in London, England. (Photo by John Phillips/Getty Images for Redbull)

    Inside the Guardian
    Community reporting: ‘These stories are at the heart of modern Britain’

  • Damian Carrington

    Inside the Guardian
    Optimism for Cop26: every bit of heating we prevent reduces suffering

    Damian Carrington
  • Fiona Harvey, environment correspondent

    Inside the Guardian
    Optimism for Cop26: we must win the climate battle – and we absolutely can

    Fiona Harvey, environment correspondent

October 2021

  • ‘We need images that viscerally depict how the emergency is affecting lives around the world’: a woman calling for help as a wildfire approaches hoiuses in a Portuguese village, 2019.

    Inside the Guardian
    ‘We’re all climate journalists now’: how the weather took over everything

    From the business section to the food magazine, Guardian editors are becoming focused on one dominant story
  • A newly acquitted Clive Ponting at the centre of a media scrum in 1985

    Guardian 200
    The spies who hated us: reporting on espionage and the secret state

    Our security correspondent speaks to a predecessor about an era of spooks, leaks and open hostility from MI5
  • Guardian and Observer Investigations

    Inside the Guardian
    How to expose corruption, vice and incompetence – by those who have

    Unmasking tax dodgers, sexual predators and corrupt officials… investigative journalism is lonely, daunting, unnerving work. But it can change the world. Here’s how it’s done - by the people who do it

September 2021

  • Tony Ageh

    Before my time
    ‘Is that live?’ The pioneers who put the ‘new’ into news

  • Jessica Elgot, the Guardian’s chief political correspondent, at her desk in the press room at Portcullis House, Houses of Parliament, in central London.

    Before my time
    ‘We never went home before 10pm’: 50 years of reporting on politics and power

  • Data image for ‘Before my time’ piece by Pamela Duncan

    Before my time
    ‘Numbers you can tell stories with’: a decade of Guardian data journalism

  • The Guardian offices. King’s Place, King’s Cross. London. Photograph by David Levene. 31/10/18

    Before my time
    Life on the newsdesk: ‘Technology has changed. Expectations haven’t’

August 2021

  • GERMANY-EUROPE-WEATHER-CLIMATE-FLOODS<br>Military personnel inspects the area on a boat across the Ahr river in Rech, Rhineland-Palatinate, western Germany, on July 21, 2021, after devastating floods hit the region. (Photo by Christof STACHE / AFP) (Photo by CHRISTOF STACHE/AFP via Getty Images)

    Before my time
    Reporting on the climate crisis: ‘For years it was seen as a far-off problem’

    Our correspondent talks to her predecessor about how global heating went from a ‘slow burn’ to the biggest story of all
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