The close links between American surveillance of Africa and military facilities in England are revealed by campaigners working for non-violent social change.
The probable election victory of Béji Caid Essebsi is a vital moment in the pioneer country of the Arab revolts. It also reveals the scale of Tunisia's economic challenges.
The leading presidential candidates and some of their supporters are setting a bad example with hostile, exclusionist rhetoric, fuelling a tense political atmosphere.
A new naval base in the Gulf reveals both the flaws in Britain's strategic thinking and the limits of its military capacity.
Those arrested in Iran after the presidential election of June 2009 join the detainees from earlier moments of repression. The blogger and openDemocracy author Hossein Derakhshan is one of the latter. The anniversary of his incarceration is being marked by efforts to publicise his case, reports Da
What are the choices facing Palestinians regarding their state sovereignty, and how best should they be pursued? Two legal scholars debate these increasingly urgent questions.
Does the rise of non-western states such as China, India, South Africa, and Brazil threaten the dominant model of international politics?
A popular uprising in the west African country reflects a wider awakening among citizens and young people across the continent.
A second letter from an Islamic State adherent operating in the part of Syria controlled by the movement.
Brazil emerges from the 2014 election with a re-elected president, two problems, and four names in mind.
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.
A BBC documentary on Rwanda produced great controversy, including in an article by Andrew Wallis. But his own critique is itself selective and inaccurate in important ways, replies one of those he criticised.