-
Published in: democraciaAbierta: InvestigationMexico's Tragic Chain: 133 journalists' lives lost
The following article features 10 obituaries of journalists killed in Mexico in 2019. They are some of the 133...
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?Turkey’s presidential dictatorship
Re-converting Ayasofya takes a major symbolic step towards the President’s ideal goal of an Islamised one-party state.
-
Published in: North Africa, West AsiaErdogan’s private police force: a new blow to Turkish democracy
The new strengthened neighborhood watchmen can further monitor and suppress Erdogan's political opponents under the...
-
Published in: democraciaAbierta: InvestigationJournalism in Mexico: Report for a living, get killed for reporting
Since 2000, 133 journalists have been murdered in Mexico. 10 of them in 2019. Meanwhile, impunity wins in 99% of cases.
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?‘Must say’ and ‘must not say’ words for the French President
A short guide on how to translate what is said to discover how power is imposing control in France.
-
Published in: openJustice: OpinionWhy you should care about the right to trial by jury
Trial by jury is one of the few aspects of the UK criminal justice system that treats people of colour fairly. It is...
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?Twenty-five years after the Srebrenica Genocide
Accounting for the missing in Bosnia and Herzegovina and beyond, the right to a family, and the right to know.
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?Srebrenica – the obliteration of memory
It is time to declare July 11 an official day of remembrance of the Srebrenica genocide; a day on which to remember...
-
Published in: Dark Money Investigations‘Magnitsky Act’ will fail while Britain remains money laundering hub, experts warn
Sanctions announced by Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab on Monday will ‘achieve little’ if current loopholes are not closed.
-
Published in: democraciaAbierta: OpinionThese 13 bodies said they would counter the pandemic in Latin America - have they?
Thirteen Inter-American and international institutions, coordinated by the OAS, agreed on a series of actions to...
-
Published in: Dark Money Investigations: InvestigationWill the e-money boom make the UK a hub of money laundering?
openDemocracy investigation finds that international money launderers are moving into Britain’s e-money business –...
-
Published in: democraciaAbiertaCOVID-19 in Brazilian prisons: Pandemic or a necropolitical project?
The prison crisis can be interpreted as the continuation of Bolsonaro's campaign platform: one rooted in the belief...
-
Published in: HomeState repression in the Philippines during COVID-19 and beyond
If draconian measures such as the Philippines’ Republic Act No 11479 are left unchallenged and unchecked, who will...
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?Covid-19 and the surge of the antiracist movement in France
Under the impulse of the Justice and Truth for Adama committee, the fight against racism may be at a turning point in France.
-
Published in: North Africa, West AsiaEgypt: a state serving the military
Since the coup of 2013, there has been a process of structural change within the Egyptian state, where civilian...
-
Published in: democraciaAbiertaInstitutional violence in Venezuela: What are militias and colectivos?
In Venezuela, violence is organized by the state through militias and collectivos. What are they? What status do...
-
Published in: openJustice: OpinionPolicing during the pandemic: an insight into racism in the UK
The policing of lockdown and the Black Lives Matter protests demonstrates the insidious nature of racist policing in the UK.
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?: OpinionShared parenting in Greece: three cheers for the Mitsotakis cabinet
“This coming autumn, the Greek right-wing government will be introducing shared parenting. This is a major...
-
Published in: Can Europe Make It?France: how come the Black Bloc never get arrested?
Sometimes what doesn’t happen is as important as what does.
-
Published in: Home: OpinionOsman Kavala and the Snails: watch, enjoy, share
The world’s first lockdown opera, ten minutes of delight against oppression