"Any constitutional change of the European institutions is futile without first restoring citizens’ trust." Lorenzo Marsili in conversation with Barbara Spinelli.
Since this initial mobilisation and the thwarting of the coup, the Turkish government has done all it can to sustain the momentum behind what it describes as a kind of popular uprising.
Residents of a neighbourhood in Berlin engage with refugees through community arts and education initiatives, revealing personal stories of welcome and integration.
BTS speaks with Prabha Pokhrel of HomeNet South Asia on the problems faced by homeworkers in Nepal.
In China too, people feel less uncomfortable when told that police on the streets are there to protect them from dangerous “others,” rather than to protect the state from them.
The British government has admitted to having no plans to recognise the UN International Decade for People of African Descent. At a time when racialised discrimination and inequality are rampant, this is unacceptable.
The abolition of the death penalty has been arguably the most symbolic result of Turkey's EU accession process. To see it revoked would be a sad, backwards step for Turkey and for the EU.
Life for voiceless, low paid parcel delivery workers exposes the harsh realities of degraded work in 21st-century Britain.
Europe simply can’t guarantee its money will stop human rights crises. At best, it will simply force migrants to trade one hell for another.
How can we possibly mobilise European millennials for progressive reform of the EU, if we continue to indulge in age-old petty bickering among the Left?
BTS speaks with Jyoti Macwan of the Self Employed Women’s Association of India on the invisibility of homeworkers in the Indian labour force.
Children’s centres in the United Kingdom are a perfect institution to stimulate contact between different groups and therefore help the integration of minorities.