-
Published in: Home: ReviewSonia Boyce feeling her way to freedom as the UK’s artist in Venice
The first Black woman to represent the UK at the world’s leading art festival calls us to imagine what freedom looks like
-
Published in: Home: OpinionThe Ukraine war has given NATO renewed credibility. That’s a problem
On the biggest issues that will threaten people around the world in the coming years, NATO is well-night irrelevant
-
Published in: oDR: InterviewWhat do persecuted Russian Muslim converts tell us about Putin’s Russia?
Interview: Olga Kravets discusses her book on Russian converts to Islam, and how their repression bodes ill for...
-
Published in: Home: OpinionThere’s still hope for a negotiated end to the Ukraine war
While there remains a danger that Russia will yet escalate the conflict, perhaps with nuclear weapons, this can...
-
Published in: Home: AnalysisA panicked DUP flounders as Northern Ireland embraces change
Northern Ireland has changed – and unionism has been left behind. But if the party can’t dominate, it won’t participate
-
Published in: 50.50: FeatureEU’s amended Digital Services Act fails to better regulate ‘revenge porn’
European politicians failed to tackle digital image-based abuse, especially on porn sites, say survivors of ‘revenge porn’
-
Published in: 50.50: Opinion‘We need to take an unusual step’: a Polish feminist’s message to her US sisters
I’ve seen what a draconian abortion law can do in Poland. Here is what I think we should do
-
Published in: Home: OpinionIt’s not the break-up of Britain… yet
Election results show that the ground is shifting in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. But the future of the UK...
-
Published in: 50.50: OpinionMy abortion was legal. But the doctors acted like I was committing a crime
I assumed that getting an abortion would be easy in North Macedonia. But I was judged and patronised at every turn
-
Published in: ourEconomy: InvestigationEU-trained soldiers responsible for deaths of civilians in Mali
EU mission to train Malian soldiers not working, says Investigate Europe, after series of deaths and human rights...
-
Published in: Home: AnalysisWill Putin use 9 May to escalate the Ukraine war or signal its end?
The president is likely to make an announcement on Russia's annual Victory Day. What he says will offer insight into...
-
Published in: 50.50: FeatureHungary’s homophobic referendum failed. But its anti-LGBTIQ war goes on
It’ll take more than spoiled votes to defeat Viktor Orbán’s policies – although it’s a great start
-
Published in: Home: OpinionWho are Marine Le Pen’s supporters in the French Caribbean?
Macron may have triumphed overall, but Le Pen won Martinique, Guadeloupe and French Guiana by a crushing margin – a...
-
Published in: Home: FeatureLow turnout is the DUP's best hope of clinging on to power in Stormont
Cross-community parties are on the rise and the DUP’s grip on power appears to be loosening. But many voters seem...
-
Published in: oDR: FeatureDown and out in Kyiv: how Russia’s invasion has hit homeless people
From volunteers’ help and empathy to alleged removal from the city by police: Kyiv’s homeless people recount their...
-
Published in: Home: FeatureNo, decolonising your bookshelf doesn’t mean getting rid of Jane Austen
It is a truth universally acknowledged that the right-wing press will inflame any debate on decolonisation,...
-
Published in: Home: Feature‘Forget about Elon Musk’: How to save the world from Big Tech
In an openDemocracy live discussion, Shoshana Zuboff and Susie Alegre warned that, left unchecked, Big Tech can...
-
Published in: 50.50: NewsBosnian politician who wanted LGBTIQ people ‘isolated’ loses landmark case
Anti-discrimination law was introduced in Bosnia 13 years ago – but it had never been used to protect LGBTIQ people
-
Published in: Home: OpinionHas Macron laid the groundwork for a Le Pen victory in 2027?
Macron has regrouped the centre-Left and centre-Right into one party. But it’s left him vulnerable
-
Published in: oDR: FeatureZelenskyi’s spokesperson: soldier, actor, psychologist, propagandist
Oleksiy Arestovych, presidential adviser and key spokesperson for Ukraine at war, has a strange past