An abysmally low turnout makes clear that Sadyr Japarov is in a precarious position
Despite the risks that it poses, predictive technology could be a force for good in refugee systems under the right legal conditions
How the Scottish Tory leader has prised open one of the country’s oldest and deepest racist fault lines
Criticism of the Supreme Court’s decision to annul ex-president Lula’s corruption convictions reveals how polarised the country has become
In an impassioned 2010 speech, Cameron condemned lobbying by ex-ministers. Eleven years on, he is apologising for doing just that
A continuation of the author's Splinters phantasmagoria
'Should we conceive the timeline of all events as already laid out on some film that starts from a past and reaches the future?'
This is not a return to the Troubles. But peace cannot truly be achieved until lives improve
The establishment wants to see off summer revolts with a new ‘Diana moment’, but it won’t succeed
Inequality shapes citizens’ views over whether their country has improved and so a deeper dive is needed to understand where the region stands
Losing allies at home and abroad, could this be the beginning of the end for Brazil’s authoritarian president?