Centrists Won’t Save Britain
Liberals are peddling an ahistorical nostalgia. The people aren’t buying it.
The Bullet Mistakenly Came Out of the Gun
For the London Review of Books - Dystopian realities in Sisi's Egypt
Democratising the Digital
Digital technologies are a market product and play politics by different means. It’s up to us to harness them for democracy
John Reed: The Journalist and the Revolution
A hundred years on from the Russian Revolution, exploring John Reed's 'Ten Days That Shook The World' on the banks of the Nile
Coming Home to the Counter Revolution
For Granta magazine - A weird relationship with a wondrous city gets weirder still
Revealed: The Insidious Creep of Pseudo-Public Space
A series of investigations into how our public spaces are increasingly privately-owned and policed by corporations
Tilbury: Britain’s ‘Brexiteer’ Town at the World’s End
Twenty miles east of London, one forgotten port community is on the frontline of a global upheaval. Tilbury's contested history is a window onto our fast-changing political landscape - in Britain, and beyond
Welcome to the Land That No Country Wants
In 2014, an American dad claimed a tiny parcel of 'unclaimed' African land to make his daughter a princess. But Jack Shenker had got there first – and learned that borders are delicate and volatile things
‘The Egyptians: A Radical Story’
A critically-acclaimed book exploring Egypt's revolution and counter-revolution from below - published by Allen Lane and Penguin
Marikana: After the Massacre
A series of special reports exploring the legacy of the Marikana mineworker massacre, in South Africa and beyond.
The Corridors of Counter-Revolution: Sharm el-Sheikh and the International Elite
As XR shifts away from radical action and the UK government restricts the right to protest, the climate movement is asking tough questions
Privatised London: The Thames Walk That Resembles a Prison Corridor
From the Isle of Dogs to Tower Bridge, just how much of the celebrated Thames riverside is actually open to the general public - and what does it tell us about money, politics and space in contemporary London?
More Than Scottish Pride
Scotland’s independence referendum isn’t about nationalism. It’s about a system that failed, and a new generation looking to take a chance on itself
Beyond the Voice of Battle
In an arena of guns and certainties, other fault lines fade to darkness. This latest wave of state violence aims at destroying the very conditions of audibility in which revolutionary voices can be heard
The ‘Left to Die’ Boat Scandal: How Dozens of Migrants Were Left By NATO Military Units to Perish at Sea
An exclusive investigation for the Guardian that provoked international outrage, and forced a policy change across Europe
An Escape From the Arab Uprisings: One Migrant's Voyage to Europe
Mohamed Munadi's Tunisian village was barely affected by the uprising, but when Libya erupted he was one of many who fled to new shores
Egypt 2011: ‘The World Turned Upside Down’
A selection of news, comment and analysis from Jack Shenker’s award-winning Guardian coverage of Egypt’s revolutionary uprising