In India last week, mobs targeted Muslims in the streets. Death tolls are still on the rise as factions come to blows, leaving shops, cars and Muslim shrines a... Read More
During the mid-semester holidays, most of our editors went home to celebrate. But with quite an international team, everyone did it differently. In this short ... Read More
For many, the nuclear agreement reached with Iran in 2015 seemed like a glimmer of hope. In the United States, it was a sign of easing tensions between two cou... Read More
By Michael Xizhuang Zhou
As Yuval Noah Harari reminds us in his best-selling book Homo Deus, “history does not tolerate a vacuum.” Even as we solve old pro... Read More
By Martha Schillmöller
For Adnan Hadad, the Syrian war did not kill the dream of democracy that fuelled the protests in 2011. But like many others he wants ... Read More
By Analucía Partida and Kavita Kapur
In mid January 2019, an issue that caused international outrage in the summer of 2018 resurfaced on the news: family se... Read More
By Sara Bundtzen
On February 20, in his annual address to the Federal Assembly, President Vladimir Putin warned top U.S. policymakers to “calculate the rang... Read More
By Cameron Rogers
The United Kingdom (UK) has more or less run out of time to come up with a viable strategy for Brexit. The inevitable “no” vote on Theresa... Read More
By Abe Collier
There was once great hope in the political left. In 1917, it celebrated the rise of communism in Russia as the liberation of peasants and wor... Read More
By Martha Schillmöller
The harsh anti-immigration stance of the Hungarian government has been slowly deteriorating the respect for human rights and in... Read More