by Margarida Teixeira
As Europe struggles to manage the influx of refugees at its borders, some arrivals are given preferential treatment while others are ostr... Read More
by Gabriela Bernal
An authoritarian government; violent crackdowns on civilian protesters; mothers burying their teenage sons killed by members of the army; pe... Read More
by Guillaume Levrier
8 millions de déplacés, dont la moitié qui choisissent de traverser les frontières. La guerre en Syrie est la cause du plus grand ... Read More
by Salma Talaat
“The current situation of women in Arab political life shows that their status has deteriorated: this is reflected in their role and in thei... Read More
by Stéphane Colin
Depuis la fin du régime d'Houphouët-Boigny en 1993, la République de Côte d'Ivoire (RCI) est entrée dans une période instable. Altern... Read More
by Riva Kastoryano
In spite of their variety, theories of nationalism are based on membership in a historical cultural community institutionalized by t... Read More
by María Noel Irabedra
Latin America is a continent full of surprises; so much so that its dynamism and rareness sometimes challenges the traditional notions t... Read More
by Jeremy Ha
Do people from Hong Kong feel proud to be Chinese? Hong Kong’s Lunar New Year celebrations in February 2016 were marred by violence follow... Read More
by Marta Cioci
In the aftermath of the collapse of the USSR, a series of reforms were carried out to privatize state-owned assets. The large-scale privatizat... Read More
For Kurds to demand recognition, much less independence, not only challenges what it means to be Turkish, but reopens old wounds bandaged for nearly a century.