


Half a loaf, at best, from the climate talks
This year’s negotiations made very modest progress
THE SENSE that the COP29 climate talks were outstaying their welcome in Baku was tangible through growing absences. Over the 30 hours between the scheduled end on Friday November 22nd and the final gavel in the early hours of Sunday morning first food, then water, then toilet paper ran out; finally fire extinguishers were slowly removed. A few dozen countries walked out, too—but they came back in time for a conclusion which, if far from inspiring, was at least better than the total breakdown that threatened.

Is your master’s degree useless?
New data show a shockingly high proportion of courses are a waste of money

The perils of appeasing a warlike Russia
Finland’s cold-war past offers urgent lessons for Ukraine’s future

The danger zone between two presidents
The world’s bad actors will relish any power vacuum
How to avoid Oval Office humiliation
A dozen officials offer tips on the dangerous art of Trump-flattery
King coal is dirty, dangerous—and far from dead
Rumours of its rapid demise have been greatly exaggerated
The world faces its worst trade wars since the 1930s
Donald Trump’s re-election accelerates a crisis for globalisation