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Six weeks, 969 million voters, 2,600 parties: India’s mammoth election explained
The world’s most populous country prepares to go to the polls, with Narendra Modi’s BJP the frontrunner in vote that ends on 1 June
Spotlight
Clean energy’s dirty secret
The trail of waste left by India’s solar power boom
As vast solar plants multiply, so does the scrap, set to reach 19m tonnes by 2050. But disposing of the waste often falls to informal traders who risk injury when dismantling broken panels
The long read
From low-level drug dealer to human trafficker: are modern slavery laws catching the wrong people?
'There’s so much tension it’s like a romantic comedy’
My first time at an archery class
In her fortnightly review of fitness and wellbeing activities, comedian Jennifer Wong finds that to succeed in life and archery, it helps to aim lower
The Ministry of Ungentlemanly Warfare review
Guy Ritchie’s fun wartime romp
Henry Cavill leads a ragtag group on an unlikely mission in this shaggy, exaggerated account of Operation Postmaster
America’s animal shelters are overwhelmed
Pets – and staff – are at breaking point
Why am I like this?
Is it possible to break the cycle of burnout for good?
Pushing Buttons
The Fallout series doesn’t just look right – it feels like it was made by gamers, too
Annina van Neel's life is forever changed after encountering a vast burial ground - one of the most significant traces of the transatlantic slave trade in the world
Exercises starting on Monday will be the first to be held outside Philippines’ territorial waters, and come amid a rise in tensions in the South China Sea
‘The money is not real – it’s a feckless level of wealth’
The inside story of the biggest art fraud in American history
Orlando Whitfield was a student when he became best friends with Inigo Philbrick, ‘the art world’s Bernie Madoff’. He talks about how their decade of hustling would lead one to a breakdown – and the other to jail
Mentally stimulating work plays key role in staving off dementia, study finds
People in routine and repetitive jobs found to have 31% greater risk of disease in later life, and 66% higher risk of mild cognitive problems
A moment that changed me
I was paralysed on a climb. Then I made the 100-mile journey back to myself
The longevity vacation
Why bar-hopping holidays are out and extreme wellness breaks are in
Slaughter-free sausages
Trying the latest lab-grown meat creation
Food
Tim Siadatan’s recipes for Italian springtime pasta
Felicity Cloake's masterclass
How to make risi e bisi
Take part
People in the US
Share your ‘modern wedding etiquette’ suggestions
Film
Post your questions for Bryce Dallas Howard
Parents in the US
Are you happy with your child’s school lunch?
Wedding photography
Share your experiences
From our global editions
Analysis
Why has Hugh Grant settled his phone hacking claim against the Sun?
'Shamelessly unrepentant'
Ten Years to Save the West by Liz Truss review
US politics is awash with crude and misleading attack ads. Now it’s the UK’s turn
Jonn Elledge
Dina Asher-Smith
‘For the first time in 10 years, I can just kind of be’
In case you missed it
Arizona reinstated a near-total ban on abortions
Providers are surprisingly optimistic
Low-carb diets work
Why does the American Diabetes Association push insulin instead?
The American Diabetes Association takes millions from companies that stand to profit from our reliance on drugs. Is that affecting their guidance?
‘We need more shade’
US’s hottest city turns to trees to cool those most in need
Phoenix broke several heat records last year. Now Grant Park, which has inequitable tree cover, is seeing a tree-planting drive that promises some respite from 100F temperatures
Exclusive
Kharkiv at risk of becoming ‘second Aleppo’ without US aid, mayor says
Photo essay
In Maryland, female migrant laborers face an uncertain future as sea levels rise
‘Although I’m tetraplegic, I’ve started to feel normal’
Hanif Kureishi on staging The Buddha of Suburbia
‘Water is more valuable than oil’
The corporation cashing in on America’s drought
Loads more stories and moves focus to first new story.