Autism
Gregg Wallace and the problem of the diagnostic label defence
We need more careful thought about the interactions between mental and neurodevelopmental conditions and misbehaviour
We have a disordered approach to autism and extremism
Autism cannot be considered a factor in crime only after crimes have been committed
Unpacking neurodivergence and gender identity
Neurodivergent teenagers are in danger of having their struggles miscategorised
Banned for speaking out against medical mutilation
Why is Twitter silencing debate around the abuse of autistic children?
Autism and the cost of care
For all US healthcare’s faults, it outperforms the NHS on autism provision
Most Read
Grooming gangs and the truth
We should not give ammunition to deniers of the grooming gangs scandal
Why has Keir Starmer been so unpopular?
He was the perfect embodiment of a failing system
Babies need women
Leaving children with only men who are not their parents is foolish and dangerous
Stop ignoring the Islamisation of our democracy
The British state is bending to Islamism, not attempting to defeat it
I’m worried about Andy Burnham
If Burnham does to Britain what he has done to Manchester, we are in big trouble
The great HR survivors
As the DEI era fades, personnel heads live on as senior CEO consiglieri and hatchet-bearers
Antisemitism and the Islamic connection
Antisemitic sentiments in Islamic theology cannot be overlooked or obscured
Carry on, matron
The crisis in nursing can be reversed by a return to Florence Nightingale’s vision of vocation and a rebuilt hierarchy on the wards
The sacrifice that changed Naipaul
The humiliation of his father, forced to slaughter a goat to atone for
angering Hindus, made the writer wary of insulting religion
Jorge Luis Borges
A giant of Spanish letters who was forged by childhood exposure to his father’s vast English library
Critical briefing: local elections
Our political editor explains what to look out for in Thursday’s elections
Don’t panic about “Angry Young Women”
Despite everything, most people are still fairly normal
The last thing Labour needs
The revival of the Terminally Ill Adults Bill threatens to consume a party already struggling to hold itself together
The chairwoman of the board
A story driven at a whip-crack pace, pulsing with manic energy and nail-biting
