Skip to main contentSkip to navigation

Clare Horton

Clare Horton is commissioning editor of the Guardian's Animals farmed series. She was formerly the Guardian's Society online editor

December 2021

  • Stranded cattle are rescued from a farm after storms caused flooding and landslides in British Columbia, Canada.

    Animals farmed update
    Animals farmed: airport patrol pigs, male chicks and China’s meat demand

    Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web

November 2021

  • Anti-meat protest

    Animals farmed update
    Animals farmed: meat taxes, death in farming and anti-climate lobbying

    Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web

October 2021

  • Processing beef carcasses at an abattoir

    Animals farmed update
    Animals farmed: UK supply chain crisis, meat plant workers exploited and Billie Eilish’s Cop26 plea

    Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web

August 2021

  • Chinese pig farmer Sun Dawu at a feed warehouse in Hebei.

    Animals farmed update
    Animals Farmed: China’s pig critic jailed, rescue sanctuaries and factory farming ban

    Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web

July 2021

  • Farmers protest in Toulouse in April against common agricultural policy reform negotiations.

    Animals farmed update
    Animals farmed: EU cage-ban moves closer, magic of horse power and ‘egg-mageddon’

    Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web

June 2021

  • Chickens in cages

    Animals farmed update
    Animals farmed: MEPs vote to ban cages, meat firm pays ransom – and anyone for crickets?

    Welcome to our monthly roundup of the biggest issues in farming and food production, with must-read reports from around the web

January 2021

  • Sue Hulme (left) and Deb Fath pick flowers to make bouquets at the Wonky Garden, Cheshire

    Blooms of hope: the gardening groups delivering smiles during lockdown

  • Cerrie Burnell

    The Society interview
    Cerrie Burnell: 'Disabled people have been shut away during the pandemic'

December 2020

  • Secret Country, Re-Live, Rehearsal on Zoom, 2020

    'We don't want to be seen as victims': the older people using theatre to tell their Covid stories

    Digital theatre production in Wales counters views of older people as vulnerable and frail in the face of coronavirus

November 2020

  • Book of Homelessness

    'This is our truth': the world's first graphic novel made by homeless people

  • Occupational therapists treat a patient during lockdown, at the Royal Blackburn teaching hospital.

    'Will we have energy to keep going?' Occupational therapists brace for Covid second wave

September 2020

  • Working from home

    'Nine at night and my laptop is still open': social work in a pandemic

  • Touchstone's BAME dementia cafe in Leeds

    ‘It's good for the brain’: how music can help BAME people living with dementia

June 2020

  • A young woman at home in the kitchen is using a telephone

    Without my work and family, volunteering helped me through lockdown

    Supporting neighbours has offset the shock of being put on furlough and social distancing – and eased pressure on the NHS

April 2020

  • Residents paint rainbow pictures

    Stories, songs and iPads: how care home residents are staying connected in lockdown

    Homes are using technology to keep residents close to their loved ones during the coronavirus outbreak

March 2020

  • Homecare Staff enable elderly and disabled people to live in their own homes, through support and help with household chores

    Self-isolating UK care workers face debt and hunger, warns charity

    Care Workers’ Charity launches £1m coronavirus hardship appeal for care staff in an ‘impossible situation’

February 2020

  • first impressions count<br>Posed by model
young man at his job interview with his cv under his arm

    'I've come so far': the scheme helping people with mental health issues into work

    A pioneering programme brings together health and employment experts to support clients to find and keep jobs

August 2019

  • The gardens at HMP Parc near Bridgend, south Wales

    ‘Gardening helps our mental health. They should do more of it in jail’

    HMP Parc’s gardening scheme is improving prisoners’ lives – and has won an award from the Royal Horticultural Society

April 2019

  • Paul Yusuf McCormack<br>Guardian Society. Paul Yusuf McCormack at home in near Rugby. He was brought up in care and has produced art works which deal with the labels applied to him during that time. He is now a training specialist for Focus on Fostering events at Warwickshire Council.

    The Society interview
    Yusuf Paul McCormack: ‘I would have loved somebody older to have said – you’re going to be OK’

    A care leaver who faced terrible abuse growing up in a care home 50 years ago explains why he now talks about his experiences

March 2019

  • East Sutton Park Prison Workshop  with children's author Smirti Prasadan-Halls.

    ‘It’s not just you who does the jail sentence, it’s the whole family’

    Project allows prisoners to reconnect with children and young relatives by writing them a bedtime story
About 1,004 results for Clare Horton
1234...