The second round of the French presidential election is not about voting for the lesser of two evils. It’s about bringing progressives together to vote against evil itself. Español
The working children of Senegal have long organised to educate, support, and protect one another from the everyday violence of life on the streets.
The UK Supreme Court has accepted the principle of a minimum income requirement for bringing family members into Britain, but hope remains for British families split by borders.
The multiplicity of harms can feel overwhelming. But with thoughtful coordination we can support each other to resist this administration's agenda and its global impacts.
Two Budapest-based activists give a vivid account of the ideological constraints they are working under, not helped by certain fashionable forms of ‘intersectionality’.
The idea of a 'two-speed European Union', proposed by Jean-Claude Juncker, ignores the actual problems which are causing this to be discussed in the first place.
Could this little-known system provide a way forward for real democracy – from the bottom up – in our failing neoliberal political systems?
The year-end reports from the UK’s national referral mechanism fail to present a comprehensive understanding of trafficking in the UK.
Amid a timid media, weak political opposition, and restrictions on civil society, university campuses are among the only spaces left for dissent and debate.
We are living in a period of cultural revolution agitated by the omnipresence of ICTs, where social practices run into systems of government designed and created in the 19th century. Español Português
The families of many Irish citizens and residents are stuck in war zones. Why won’t the state offer them safe passage?
The truth is that the former economy minister has no solid constituency backing him, and no real popularity.