Sorry? If there is one thing we are not apologising for at openDemocracy it is our timely debate on Sorry: the politics of apology.
Take this week: four high-profile apologies
Why does "open" mean including pro-war arguments?
I was asked this by a supporter of openDemocracy when he learnt I was commissioning arguments from those who back Bush
All political and social progress is built on a foundation of clarifying dialogue. A world polarised by vast inequalities of wealth and power, crises of governance, ideologies of intolerance and
Here at openDemocracy we are about to leave our pilot period and launch the full model. The moment is fraught with danger as American power is being exercised in a
While our election coverage ranges from Serbia and Ireland to Brazil, an unplanned debate on protest has broken out on openDemocracy. It is mainly British in its examples at the
Mass indiscriminate killing has returned. In Bali, a terrorism which steals the name of Islam, has not just attacked a centre for western tourism. It has assaulted the Balinese for
Paul Rogers has become a companion, carefully walking us through the minefield some call world government.
He has been writing his global security column for a year. All fifty are
If US forces attack Iraq, will Iraqis be freed from a horrible dictatorship? They dont need to dance in the streets of Baghdad to express appreciation. Whatever may go
Across the world people are taking to the streets. In Italy enormous numbers mobilised against Prime Minister Berlusconis re-writing of Italys legal system to suit himself. In Palestine,
Peace breaks out in Macedonia! Misha Glennys article is not a lead story. Alas, as the world prepares for war, this weeks top articles in openDemocracy continue our post
It is too soon to look back. The current media re-run of 11 September is not an innocent reminder of what it was like. Repeats and slow motion reinforce a
The head of the International Chamber of Commerce is interviewed about globalisation in its Paris headquarters