An interview with Jovana Spremo, Advocacy Director at the Lawyers’ Committee for Human Rights (YUCOM). Interviewer: The Human ...
Estonia’s current political climate is now in a state of flux. While the traditionally largest parties face difficulties ...
The recent elections in the Czech Republic are likely to result in key changes in the country’s outlook. A turn away from ...
From the quiet of Karaberd, an almost abandoned village where elders live, to the vibrant Karashamb, where young families ...
Aleksandar Vučić has for many years been trying to balance between East and West, maintaining close ties with Russia, cultivating good relations with the United States, and simultaneously striving for ...
Peace in Ukraine will not come while one side still believes it can win on the battlefield. Supplying Ukraine with Tomahawk missiles is not an escalation, but a way to balance the fight and bring real ...
“Transport is a significant barrier. Or rather its absence,” says Maria Hlod. “Several villages in the community are very remote, and there are no regular buses or alternative means of transportation, ...
The Russian language is the only ‘big language’ in the world to remain so closely connected to its parent nation-state, Russia. Despite the fact that it is used so widely across the post-Soviet sphere ...
Bulgaria, since both its ancient and modern beginnings, has been invariably a multiethnic, mainly Slavic and Turkic, polity. School textbooks in Bulgaria lavish much attention on the ancient Bulgars, ...
The former President of Georgia has a strained relationship with his homeland. To some a hero, to others a villain – his legacy is much debated, as his time in power was crucial for the country.
What is wrong with pacifism? Pacifist arguments, on the surface, seem logical: war is harmful, peace is desirable, and weapons lead to conflict. The notion that if all countries cease supplying ...
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