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Brands Are the First Casualty of War
A fraying global order is forcing companies to pick sides.
Why COP28 Could Be the Most Contentious in Years
Prepare for the first real global debate on the future of fossil fuels.
FP’s 2023 Holiday Gift Guide
Gift ideas for the world travelers, inquisitive minds, and global foodies in your life.
What an Emerging Narrative About Renewables Gets Wrong
The green transition will mean less mining, not more.
Asia & the Pacific
India’s New Middle East Strategy Takes Shape
China
Why Xi Was All Smiles With Biden
Middle East & Africa
The Future of Hamas Passes Through Tehran
Europe
Macron Breaks Ranks With the West on Israel-Hamas War
Americas
Panama’s Mining Future Is at a Tipping Point
In the Magazine
A New Multilateralism
How the United States can rejuvenate the global institutions it created.
NATO’s Remarkable Revival
But the bloc’s future could look very different from its past.
Weekend Reads
The Inconvenient Truth of Taiwan’s Indigenous Peoples
Tribal groups assert their own claims on a contested island.
Subscribers’ Picks
America Is a Heartbeat Away From a War It Could Lose
Global war is neither a theoretical contingency nor the fever dream of hawks and militarists.
The West’s Incoherent Critique of Israel’s Gaza Strategy
The reality of fighting Hamas in Gaza makes this war terrible one way or another.
Biden Owns the Israel-Palestine Conflict Now
In tying Washington to Israel’s war in Gaza, the U.S. president now shares responsibility for the broader conflict’s fate.
Taiwan’s Room to Maneuver Shrinks as Biden and Xi Meet
As the latest crisis in the straits wraps up, Taipei is on the back foot.
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What to Expect From COP-28
For a preview of COP28, join FP’s Ravi Agrawal in conversation with Vijay Vaitheeswaran, the global energy and climate innovation editor at the Economist.
Why Did America’s Elite Keep Falling for Crypto Frauds?
Even experienced journalists got suckered by Sam Bankman-Fried.
Visual Stories
King of the Dammed
Turkish President Erdogan’s mega-infrastructure projects are enriching construction companies while reshaping his country’s waterscape for the worse.
The Scrambled Spectrum of U.S. Foreign-Policy Thinking
Presidents, officials, and candidates tend to fall into six camps that don’t follow party lines.


Formed in 2009, the Archive Team (not to be confused with the archive.org Archive-It Team) is a rogue archivist collective dedicated to saving copies of rapidly dying or deleted websites for the sake of history and digital heritage. The group is 100% composed of volunteers and interested parties, and has expanded into a large amount of related projects for saving online and digital history.
