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Time Magazine International Edition

Oct 25 2021
Magazine

Time Magazine International Edition is the go-to news magazine for what is happening around the globe. You can rely on TIME's award winning journalists for analysis and insight into the latest developments in politics, business, health, science, society and entertainment.

Shining the light

A Nobel for a Guardian • Maria Ressa, co-founder and CEO of the news site Rappler in the Philippines—and a TIME Person of the Year—on winning the Nobel Peace Prize

What you said about…

For the Record

McConnell’s debt gamble

Red Stand-in

Philippine elections will test Rodrigo Duterte’s legacy

NEWS TICKER

Inside the U.S. base where Afghans wait

Jon Gruden • Benched by bigotry

How Italy’s migrant-friendly mayor saw his dreams crumble

Retired general Stanley McChrystal believes our leaders can do better • Retired general Stanley McChrystal believes our leaders can do better

Crude Scenes

The Silence Strategy

Lessons for the next pandemic

Europe’s most fragile young democracies are in trouble

Breaking point • Facebook’s civic-integrity team prided itself on putting people before profits. Then it was shut down

FACEBOOK will not fix itself • A company that makes money by harming democracy is not going to change on its own

What the history of money says about what’s coming • IT MAKES THE WORLD GO ROUND. IT MOVES, IT GROWS—AND IT’S ALWAYS CHANGING. TIME LOOKS AT WHERE IT’S HEADING NEXT

NFTs are thriving–can the artists thrive too?

What El Salvador gets from betting on crypto

Risk and reward in the land of black bitcoin

Upstream Battle • The fight to save the Pacific Northwest salmon has landed in Washington

An American Prosecutor • ATLANTA’S FIRST BLACK FEMALE DISTRICT ATTORNEY WORKS AT THE CENTER OF A NATION’S CONVERGING CRISES

Less than equal • LGBTQ Koreans are fighting for an end to discrimination against their community

Timothée Chalamet • Charting his own course in Hollywood

Bismack Biyombo • Shooting for opportunity

Erika Hilton • Campaigning for trans rights—despite the risks

Sara Wahedi • Keeping Afghans informed and safe

Michaela Goade • Expanding the horizons of children’s literature

Chika Stacy Oriuwa • Making health care more inclusive

Kodo Nishimura • Blending Buddhist teachings and makeup

Rina Sawayama • Singing untold stories

Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim • Innovating for Indigenous people

Rayner Loi • Using AI to reduce food waste

The mystery of TV’s vanishing middle class

Cooking, but not to perfection

More fall cookbooks

A dream of mod London becomes a nightmare

A new look for the old West

A fake magazine, lovingly imagined

Elizabeth Strout • The Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Olive Kitteridge on her new novel, revisiting characters, and the best marriage advice


Expand title description text
Frequency: Every other week Pages: 110 Publisher: Time Magazine UK Ltd. Edition: Oct 25 2021

OverDrive Magazine

  • Release date: October 15, 2021

Formats

OverDrive Magazine

subjects

News & Politics

Languages

English

Time Magazine International Edition is the go-to news magazine for what is happening around the globe. You can rely on TIME's award winning journalists for analysis and insight into the latest developments in politics, business, health, science, society and entertainment.

Shining the light

A Nobel for a Guardian • Maria Ressa, co-founder and CEO of the news site Rappler in the Philippines—and a TIME Person of the Year—on winning the Nobel Peace Prize

What you said about…

For the Record

McConnell’s debt gamble

Red Stand-in

Philippine elections will test Rodrigo Duterte’s legacy

NEWS TICKER

Inside the U.S. base where Afghans wait

Jon Gruden • Benched by bigotry

How Italy’s migrant-friendly mayor saw his dreams crumble

Retired general Stanley McChrystal believes our leaders can do better • Retired general Stanley McChrystal believes our leaders can do better

Crude Scenes

The Silence Strategy

Lessons for the next pandemic

Europe’s most fragile young democracies are in trouble

Breaking point • Facebook’s civic-integrity team prided itself on putting people before profits. Then it was shut down

FACEBOOK will not fix itself • A company that makes money by harming democracy is not going to change on its own

What the history of money says about what’s coming • IT MAKES THE WORLD GO ROUND. IT MOVES, IT GROWS—AND IT’S ALWAYS CHANGING. TIME LOOKS AT WHERE IT’S HEADING NEXT

NFTs are thriving–can the artists thrive too?

What El Salvador gets from betting on crypto

Risk and reward in the land of black bitcoin

Upstream Battle • The fight to save the Pacific Northwest salmon has landed in Washington

An American Prosecutor • ATLANTA’S FIRST BLACK FEMALE DISTRICT ATTORNEY WORKS AT THE CENTER OF A NATION’S CONVERGING CRISES

Less than equal • LGBTQ Koreans are fighting for an end to discrimination against their community

Timothée Chalamet • Charting his own course in Hollywood

Bismack Biyombo • Shooting for opportunity

Erika Hilton • Campaigning for trans rights—despite the risks

Sara Wahedi • Keeping Afghans informed and safe

Michaela Goade • Expanding the horizons of children’s literature

Chika Stacy Oriuwa • Making health care more inclusive

Kodo Nishimura • Blending Buddhist teachings and makeup

Rina Sawayama • Singing untold stories

Hindou Oumarou Ibrahim • Innovating for Indigenous people

Rayner Loi • Using AI to reduce food waste

The mystery of TV’s vanishing middle class

Cooking, but not to perfection

More fall cookbooks

A dream of mod London becomes a nightmare

A new look for the old West

A fake magazine, lovingly imagined

Elizabeth Strout • The Pulitzer Prize–winning author of Olive Kitteridge on her new novel, revisiting characters, and the best marriage advice


Expand title description text