Next Year in Moscow | Russia

7. The runway

In episode 7 of our podcast, a lawyer explains why she continues to defend Russia’s top opposition figures in the face of impossible odds

|1 min read

Maria Eismont, a defence lawyer, has remained in Russia. Her clients include high-profile opposition figures who have received long sentences for spreading “fake news” about the war in Ukraine. Facing long odds and great personal risk, she guides the Kremlin’s enemies through their day in court. Why has she chosen to stay and do this work?


Reuse this content
Migrants walk into Mexico after being deported from the United States

Podcast The Intelligence

The global asylum system is broken—this is how to fix it

Also on the daily podcast: the rise of superstar coders and a free London performance puts a spotlight on modern fame

21:49

Podcast Editor’s Picks

The delusions plagueing Britain’s warming summers

A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist

08:02


University of Washington computational biologist professor David Baker walks around his lab at the University of Washington after receiving the 2024 Nobel Prize in chemistry, Seattle, Washington, USA.

Podcast Babbage

Scientists are using AI to invent proteins from scratch

Our podcast on science and technology. Scientists can design and make novel proteins. One day they may even be able to build entire genomes.

38:17


Podcast The Intelligence

Another delay of hostilities in Trump’s global trade war

Also on the daily podcast: Brazil’s broken football machine and England falls out of love with its lawns

21:53

Podcast Editor’s Picks

An insight into Jeff Bezos’s approach to life

A handpicked article read aloud from the latest issue of The Economist

07:12

Podcast Drum Tower

China is closing the gap with America in high-tech weaponry

Our weekly podcast on China. This week, we examine the role Chinese weapons played in the recent India-Pakistan conflict—and what it means for the future of warfare

43:56