Time Magazine International Edition is the go-to news magazine for what is happening around the globe. You can rely on TIME's award winning journalists for analysis and insight into the latest developments in politics, business, health, science, society and entertainment.
CONVERSATION
TRUMP’S 2024 TEST • His first campaign stops reveal a candidate unsure of what his base wants
Fresh grief
Biden’s promised Abrams tanks won’t arrive in Ukraine for months
Why are groceries so expensive right now?
MILESTONES
A snowless future foretold on Europe’s tawny slopes
When science meets seafood
Peru protests
5 ways to find the right therapist for you
Civilization Over Nation
What falling birth rates reveal about China’s future
The D.C. Brief
Health Matters
The secret tax on women’s time
Solutions for a fragmented world • Before the World Economic Forum met in Davos in January, young changemakers in the group’s Global Shaper network named the issues they would tackle
Sleepwalking into a less secure future
David Beasley • The head of the World Food Programme worries about 2023
OUR ENDURING DISCONTENTS • HOW TO UNDERSTAND AMERICA
DEATH BY AMERICAN BRUTALITY • THE BEATING OF TYRE NICHOLS IS HARD TO WATCH. BUT WE MUST BEAR WITNESS
SHADOW NETWORK • Inside the clandestine effort to smuggle a free internet into Iran, one dish at a time
Hollywood movies just aren’t as sexy as they used to be. Blame superheroes
THE QUANTUM LEAP • Quantum computing will transform our world—and create a 21st century “space race”
KEEPING AI IN CHECK • Why ChatGPT’s creator is pro-regulation
PROGRESS HAS ITS RISKS • We must not blindly follow innovation
OLDER, WISER, WAY MORE FUN • Movies aimed at older women, like 80 for Brady, are often derided—but they belong to a time-honored genre
Apocalypse (possibly) now
The network comedy is not dead yet
The 12-year-old boy who fell to earth
What to watch, read, and listen to this winter
Representative Ruben Gallego • The Arizona Democrat serving his fifth term in Congress on challenging Kyrsten Sinema, his breaking point, and political labels