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Reportage

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Stepping into in Kabul

Maya Evans gives eye witness report from Kabul where she is on a delegation with the US group Voices for Creative Nonviolence

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“Welcome to Afghanistan, land of the brave”

Maya Evans gives eye witness report from Kabul where she is on a delegation with the US group Voices for Creative Nonviolence

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Sweeties for the boys

The freebies given away at DSEi arms fair in London are so extraordinary they need to be seen to be believed. Jill Gibbon has drawn and photographed a selection.

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Occupy Diary

Natalia Grana reflects on the circumstances of her involvement with Occupy Manchester

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Roll on Fem12

Claire Poyner reports from this year's huge feminist gathering in London

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The Photographer

(First Second, 2009; 272pp; £10.99)

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Occupy Manchester

Natalia Grana writes from the occupation in the city centre.

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Dress code

Jill Gibbon reports from Britain's biggest arms fair.

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Decision Day at Dale Farm: 19 September

Patrick Nicholson gives a view behind the barricades of organising resistance to the Dale Farm eviction

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DSEi-ing with death

ImageThis is the first of a series of drawings from DSEi 2011.

As the world’s largest arms fair, DSEi is part of a wider shift in the commercialisation of war. Although arms companies have always profited from conflict, military production was previously linked to the perceived needs of the state.

In the 1990s this changed. Arms companies responded to the reduction of military budgets at the end of the Cold War by expanding beyond state boundaries, merging into multinationals and selling to almost any country willing to buy. Caught between the national and multinational, promising defence while selling war, the international arms trade is riddled with contradictions.

Arms companies sell military equipment to opposing sides of border disputes, to developing countries at inflated prices, and to repressive regimes for ‘crowd control’. Many of these deals take place at DSEi. ...