Laura Anne Jones, Nigel Farage's first member of the Senedd, has an uncanny ability for making headlines. Just not good ones
As former Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari’s death is mourned with official reverence, a generation remembers the eight years that drove them out.
The U. S. deployment of missiles in the Philippines is an escalation that has angered China and could come back to bite Filipinos most of all.
The International Court of Justice’s landmark ruling shifts the obligation of climate action from moral appeal to legal duty.
This GIJN guide offers reporting best practices, key resources as well as what questions to ask when investigating methane emissions from landfills and how to reduce them.
Thirty years on, the genocide is remembered annually, but locals feel forgotten and struggle with ongoing division
A festival in Leipzig marks half a century since sex workers and priests stood together in solidarity against police violence
The meanings of fancy and fantasy have diverged rather considerably over the centuries, just as the spellings have also changed
A female nurse in Scotland became the focus of a witch hunt that shows how Britain’s institutions have become overcome by an elite ideology
In Sinaloa, the threat of death and chaos hangs in the air as the brutal cartel war shows little sign of abating
Beneath the peak of Monte Soratte near Rome is a vast, eerie tunnel complex – an underground graveyard of the German troops who died there
An unashamed member of the educated liberal elite, he parlayed his wit and access into a career of TV interviews and debates
Social housing in the UK has a reputation for drabness. Other countries have done it far better – it’s time to learn from the ones who got it right
To avoid chaos, and in true German style, the country’s schools break-up for summer at different times
If you had said to me then she might end up attached to a powerful man, able to build and exploit connections wherever he found them, I could well have seen how it may happen