This holiday season we asked friends of the show to share some positive developments from 2018 that didn’t get enough attention.
Dr. Courtney Radsch is the advocacy director at the Committee to Protect Journalists and says the global news media is learning how to demonstrate its importance directly to news consumers.
This holiday season we asked friends of the show to share some positive developments from 2018 that didn’t get enough attention.
Daryl Kimball is the executive director of the Arms Control Center and says the global public is beginning to pay closer attention to ties between major tech firms and the military.
This holiday season we asked friends of the show to share some positive developments from 2018 that didn’t get enough attention.
Geoff Thale at the Washington Office on Latin America says long-overdue justice could finally be served for a brutal massacre in El Salvador in the 1980’s.
This holiday season we asked friends of the show to share some positive developments from 2018 that didn’t get enough attention.
Daphne Eviatar is the Director of Security with Human Rights at Amnesty International USA and highlights a rare admission by the U.S. military.
This holiday season we asked friends of the show to share some positive developments from 2018 that didn’t get enough attention.
Richard Gowan is a senior fellow at the U.N. University and says the U.N. Compact on Migration deserves more praise.
This holiday season we asked friends of the show to share some positive developments from 2018 that didn’t get enough attention.
Sarah Repucci is the senior director for research and analysis at Freedom House and says Ethiopia and Angola have emerged as new bright spots for freedom and rule of law on African continent.
Once again, a new U.S. asylum rule forcing migrants to 'remain in Mexico' during screening appears to violate international refugee law.
Contrary to Trump's assertion, Vladimir Putin vocally cheered on the US retreat from Syria, saying the US never had permission to there in the first place.
Handing Syria over to Turkey and President Assad could create the same opening for terrorists that the U.S. originally went there to clean up.
Will the Hungarian government's increase embrace of force to counter demonstrators finally prompt the E.U. to punish Viktor Orbán?
The allure of cutting-edge gene editing surgery is strong, but dangers loom. Can the WHO set ethical standards before it's too late?
A new generation of nuclear reactors incorporates "passive" safety features designed to operate in power outages or other emergencies.
America's new Africa policy aims to counter growing Russian and Chinese influence without spending the money to do so.
A new study puts the combat death toll of the Saudi-led war in Yemen at 60,000, and that's a conservative estimate.
The US boycotted the non-binding UN deal over purported concerns it would threaten America's sovereign right to set domestic immigration policy.
French President Emmanuel Macron is betting that an apology for misdiagnosing the country's ills and the unveiling of wage and tax tweaks will calm mass protests.
1.3 million people will die on the roads worldwide this year, and that number keeps increasing.
France's "yellow vest" protest movement defies easy partisan categorization. Don't expect it to disappear overnight.
Qatar's natural gas focus made it a less useful OPEC, but the country's departure from the cartel still carries symbolic importance.
Renewable energy investment in the developing world now surpasses that in rich economies. Luiza Demoro of Bloomberg New Energy Finance explains how that came to pass.
A weekend dinner between the leaders of the U.S. and China has averted the imposition of new sanctions, but it's hardly a long-term fix.