World leaders say they are tackling multinational tax avoidance. If so, they must expand and deepen current reforms.
The blame game allows these commonly quite similar parties in practice to distinguish themselves from each other in rhetoric.
Many Syrian activists have left Syria voluntarily, either being refused permission to return or being threatened with imprisonment or death. They face an unknown destiny in exile.
An industry has grown up around migratory routes in which care and control functions alternately clash and merge with each other. Understanding the humanitarian-policing nexus at play is key to moving beyond the current impasse.
If Catalan markets are subject to European regulation, if redistribution is increasingly coming under threat, and if the inhabitants of Catalonia prefer a different combination of public services, why should it have to share the same state structures as Spain?
An industry has grown up around migratory routes in which care and control functions alternately clash and merge with each other. Understanding the humanitarian-policing nexus at play is key to move beyond the current impasse.
Brazil emerges from the 2014 election with a re-elected president, two problems, and four names in mind.
Boycotts and divestment can be useful tools for righting wrongs, but they are apolitical tantrums in cases of right versus right.
The Arab world is often misunderstood by the tendency to ignore or flatten its differences - through time, across states, between peoples. Challenging this essentialism is the condition of progress.
It is widely said that young people did not vote on Sunday, and at some of the polling stations in central Tunis there were few young people in the queues.
Instead of empowering Syrian civil society and helping it to build its capacity, the aid community is rendering us more fragile.
As the Iraqi crisis haunts the Kurds, double standards in the principle of self-determination come to the fore.