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Project: The Guardian podcast

Welcome to Project, our podcast examining the future of the world. That's a pretty big topic but together with host Gabrielle Jackson we'll talk to Guardian correspondents from every continent to discuss the hot topics effecting everyone around the planet 

  • Pigeons fly past a poster depicting Russian President Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi pasted on the Brancusi Atelier by activists from Reporters Without Borders (RSF) to mark the 20th annual World Press Freedom day in Paris<br>Pigeons fly past a poster depicting Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping (R) pasted on the Brancusi Atelier by activists from Reporters Without Borders (RSF) to mark the 20th annual World Press Freedom day in Paris, May 3, 2013. The slogan reads, "Without freedom of information, no counter-power". REUTERS/Benoit Tessier (FRANCE - Tags: POLITICS CIVIL UNREST MEDIA ANIMALS TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) TEMPLATE OUT

    The creeping rise of authoritarianism and the risk to media around the world – Project podcast

    Are democracies around the world slowly taking away the freedoms that keep them vibrant?
  • A Rohingya child in Aceh

    Migration: a critical point in modern history – Project podcast

    The burden for hosting the world’s more than 60 million displaced people is falling in an inequitable way. How can we meet this challenge as isolationist movements spring up?
  • Supporters of Rodrigo Duterte during his successful Philippine presidential election campaign in April 2016

    The global rise of populist political movements – Project podcast

    Guardian editors and correspondents discuss the wave of populism in 2016 that handed triumphs to Donald Trump, Nigel Farage and Rodrigo Duterte
  • Donald Trump may not have to leave the Paris agreement to undo everything it is trying to accomplish.

    Guardian editors discuss the future of global climate change policy – Project podcast

    The first in a new series of in-depth discussions featuring expert correspondents from Australia, China and across south-east Asia
  • In this image obtained from NASA, the Moon s shadow engulfed Taiwan (L) and a large swath of southeastern China and the Pacific Ocean on the morning of July 22, 2009, during an unusually long total eclipse of the Sun. This pair of images from the Japanese geostationary satellite MTSAT show the view of Earth at 8:30 a.m. local time in Taiwan (L) and an hour later (R), near the time in eastern China when the disk of the Moon completely overlapped the disk of the Sun. The longest period of totality occurred over the Pacific, where the total eclipse lasted more than 6 minutes. AFP PHOTO/NASA/HO   = RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE = (Photo credit should read -/AFP/Getty Images)

    Intro episode: Project podcast

    Welcome to Project, our podcast examining the future of the world. That’s a pretty big topic but together with host Gabrielle Jackson we’ll talk to Guardian correspondence from every continent to discuss the hot topics effecting everyone around the planet
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