View of Kampala.
Shutterstock.
China is funding global infrastructure projects to expand its influence and capacity for economic growth.
EPA-EFE
Football is supposed to be the ‘people’s game’, but the English Premier League is easier and cheaper to follow if you are a fan of a club based in London or the prosperous southeast.
Other European cities have been quick to sense opportunities from Brexit.
Charles Hawley/Twitter
Always delicate balancing act, ensuring London maintains its appeal to tech start-ups will prove more difficult after Brexit.
Police in Camden, after a young man of Somali origin was stabbed in February 2018.
Dominic Lipinski/PA Archive
Somali community leaders should help to foster links with their traditional culture.
Jonas Tebbe/Unsplash.
Socialisation of housing would see profits from rent put back into the maintenance and modernisation of the buildings.
Ian Francis/Shutterstock.
Homelessness in the UK has been rising for a decade – short term funding may have offered respite, but it won’t lead to long term solutions.
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan at the Walthamstow youth project, Spark2Life.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Archive
Knife crime is a symptom of the toxic environments that adults create around children.
An attack in London left a man dead. But did you hear about it?
John Stillwell/PA
London is struggling to manage a violent crime epidemic, yet the Manchester attack attracted global attention.
Lin-Manuel Miranda plays Jack, a lamplighter, in the sequel to the original 1964 film.
Disney
The lamps that once lit London’s streets have come to symbolize a certain time and place in British history.
History repeats itself.
Lewis Whyld/PA Images.
When people don’t trust the government, the media or police, they are less inclined to play by the rules and more likely to lash out violently.
John Williams RUS/Shutterstock.
London’s low emission zone has started to reduce air pollution – but not enough to protect children’s lungs.
Cathy Yan’s Dead Pigs.
BFI London Film Festival
This year’s London Film Festival presented a contemporary view of China rarely seen in European cinema.
Matt From London/Flickr.
For a nation in the grips of a housing crisis, you’d expect high-rise developments to be good news – unfortunately not.
Peter J Coughlan/Flickr.
There are early indicators that London’s fortunes could be shifting.
City Skyline and Main River in Frankfurt, Germany.
Valerian Alecsa / Shutterstock
Economic polarisation across Europe is becoming an important phenomenon, in part driven by monetary policies that can increase office prices and can even affect the fundamentals that drive the markets.
M Rose/Shutterstock.com
The closure of a London pie shop raises questions regarding the relationship between food and identity.
As extreme weather events, like Hurricane Florence, become more common it is time to ask what it will take for the world to finally tackle climate change. Encouragingly, there may be a historical precedent: Victoria London’s handling of the ‘Great Stink’, where growth had turned the River Thames into an open sewer.
EPA/JIM LO SCALZO
As climate extremes mount, let’s reflect on Victorian London’s ‘Great Stink’ sewage crisis - when things finally became so bad authorities were forced to accept evidence, reject sceptics, and act.
Shutterstock
As traffic slows down, research is gathering momentum.
Jozef Sowa/Shutterstock
House prices in London fell by 0.6% in June after years of high growth.
Residents of Pandanad sit in a bus stop surrounded by flood waters, in Kerala, India.
Manjunath Kiran/AFP
Uncontrolled growth at the expense of the environment will severely exacerbate the impacts of climate change. As shown with tragic floods in India, our cities are not prepared for extreme events.