Tom is GP's Online Editor and researcher at the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Tom Kirk
Post Archive
Julian Baggini on lies, damn lies, and political realities.
Politicians lie. That has to be one of the most universal and least controversial claims anyone could make,…
What are the Brexit answers – and what indeed are the right questions? Anthony Barnett’s new book, ‘Lure of Greatness’ triggers a lively exchange of…
This is the final part of a wide-ranging interview with world-renowned public intellectuals Noam Chomsky and Robert Pollin.
In an increasingly unequal country, the stakes are high…
At the Group of Twenty Leaders Summits (“G20”) and its affinity groups, like the Business 20, Youth 20, and Women 20, we are seeing the emergence of new groupings of…
Ever since the outbreak of the global financial crisis, more and more rules have been developed to reduce the public cost of banking crises and increase the private sector’s…
The new estimates on modern slavery hide incontrovertible biases within them, but their weight will be used to justify the actions of ‘white saviours’ for years to…
Branko Milanovic explores the link between mass wars and inequality.
It has become somewhat of a truism to hold that big mass mobilization cause income inequality to…
Avril Keating explores research on what young Britons really think about Brexit.
In the immediate aftermath of the EU referendum, much was made of how devastated young people were…
Humans will work increasingly closely with machines, and we need to prepare people for that, write Terence Tse, Mark Esposito and Danny Goh.
Artificial intelligence (AI) has been…
For the first time, a paradise in danger will host the UN climate talks. Can Fiji’s presidency bring about the desperately needed global partnerships for island nations?
The…
Nations Torn Asunder: The Challenge of Civil War by Bill Kissane. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2016. 285 pp., £18.99 hardcover 978-0-19-960287-2
This book deals with the…
C.J. Polychroniou looks back at the October Revolution and its ramifications.
Exactly one hundred years ago today, in the evening of October 25, 1917, the Winter Palace in…
This is the second part of a wide-ranging interview with world-renowned public intellectuals Noam Chomsky and Robert Pollin.
C.J. Polychroniou: Noam, racism, inequality, mass…
Nina Hall asks what the New Zealand election can tell us about global political shifts?
Yesterday New Zealand’s new government was sworn into office. At its helm…
Konstantinos Efstathiou explores the prize winner's contributions.
Martin Sandbu in the FT lists some of Thaler’s seminal contributions to behavioural economics, which…