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Published in: Home: NewsPolice have record £12m legal fund for officers accused of crimes
Exclusive: The legal budget for the Police Federation of England and Wales has increased by 25% since 2018
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Published in: Home: NewsNew UK sanctions rules to halt libel cases following Prigozhin case
The government is tightening its rules after openDemocracy revealed it helped a sanctioned warlord sue a journalist
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Published in: Home: OpinionWe expect Tories to re-hash failed anti-social behaviour laws. Why is Labour?
OPINION: Labour should push for a fairer, freer society, not call for more police just days after the Casey report
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Published in: Home: NewsUK’s extreme weather support for rough sleepers labelled ‘inadequate’
Exclusive: A new report has warned homelessness services in the UK are not prepared for the climate crisis
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Published in: Home: OpinionMore women in the police won’t reduce police violence
OPINION: Focusing on the gender of officers is misleading – violence and intimidation are integral to policing
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Published in: Home: Feature‘Night and day we cry’: A family’s year in an asylum seeker hotel
As a new report labels asylum accommodation ‘de-facto detention’, a mother details her family’s struggle
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Published in: Home: OpinionMinisters blocked my questions on why they let a warlord sue a journalist
LIAM BYRNE: The government must be transparent about its decision to waive sanctions against Yevgeny Prigozhin
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Published in: Home: OpinionWe can't let landlords define the narrative on renting
OPINION: Thought landlords were selling up and making it even harder to rent? Think again
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Published in: 50.50: ExplainerWhat you need to know about Uganda’s anti-LGBTIQ bill
Uganda will have among the most draconian anti-LGBTIQ legislation in Africa if the bill becomes law
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Published in: Home: FeatureWhistleblowers pay the price for speaking up. A new law could protect them
People who speak out about wrongdoing in the workplace can often face blacklisting, harassment and legal action....
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Published in: oDR: AnalysisRussia targets its oldest human rights group, Memorial
Memorial ‘personifies’ Russia’s link to Europe. Little wonder then authorities are making their final moves against...
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Published in: Home: NewsLandlords aren’t leaving the market in droves, admits Tory housing minister
Rachel Maclean said the narrative being pushed by some MPs and the property sector is ‘wrong’
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Published in: Home: NewsRishi Sunak supports expanding police powers despite damning Casey Report
The government is ‘confident’ in its decision to hand police new powers – despite scathing review of the Met Police
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Published in: Home: OpinionIt’s time to abolish the Met Police
OPINION: You can’t reform a system that’s doing exactly what it’s intended to do
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Published in: Home: NewsPutin’s warlord planned new legal attack on BBC with UK government help
Yevgeny Prigozhin, who leads the notorious Wagner army, sought to attack the BBC two months before the Ukraine invasion
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Published in: Home: OpinionInvading Iraq is what we did instead of tackling climate change
OPINION: Instead of launching a war, the US and UK could have weaned us off the fossil fuels that pay for the brutal...
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Published in: Home: OpinionThe Iraq War 20 years on: End of the US’s post-9/11 neoconservative dream
OPINION: The 2003 Iraq war led to huge numbers of civilian deaths, and continuing insurgencies in the Middle East and Africa
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Published in: Home: NewsCleaners are suing Great Ormond Street for alleged institutional racism
Ethnic minority hospital cleaners say they were denied NHS contracts and paid less than the majority-white NHS staff
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Published in: oDR: OpinionMy friend was jailed for eight years for opposing Russia’s war
Dmitry Ivanov has been sentenced to eight and a half years behind bars for speaking out. This is his story
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Published in: Home: FeatureHow spying on campaigners became mainstream in the UK
Many of the UK’s most prominent institutions are using private intelligence firms to snoop on activists