Two court rulings in Denmark and Norway reveal the contradictions at the heart of the European debate on free speech versus incitement to terrorism.
Some of our best contributors on the Greek crisis give their thoughts on how they would vote in Sunday's referendum.
Grassroots social movements of the style seen at Occupy can be converted into actions that will force their relevance upon established political structures.
How will Greece be able to fix its economy in a desert landscape, with no appetite for reforms, without helpful partners and with a crippled democracy?
The future demands that, with the power vested upon us by that NO, we renegotiate Greece's public debt as well as the distribution of burdens between the haves and the have nots.
There is a responsibility on those working in Scots to use the language imaginatively, and to break it into new political possibilities.
Two recent milestones in Kosovo – an official monument recognising women’s suffering during the Kosovo War, and an art installation commemorating wartime rape – shows that change may be coming to a topic long taboo in the country.
I would vote yes as I do not want my objections to the way the crisis has been managed at home and in Brussels to be usurped by politicians that dream that they can give the Union a bloody nose by destroying the Eurozone.
Los pesimistas pronostican una catástrofe social en Grecia. Pero en Argentina, la crisis de 2001 fue resuelta por los ciudadanos, no por lo banqueros. English
Millions of Spaniards have engaged in protests over the past four years. As of July 1 they can be subject to disproportionate fines and even jail for exercising their democratic rights to freedom of expression, assembly, protest and information. Interview.
The revolt is real against authoritarianism, whatever the outcome of the referendum.
Doom merchants predict social catastrophe for Greece. But when Argentina defaulted in 2001, the people - not the banks - rallied to the rescue. Español