View of the Palais de Chaillot, Paris, in September 1948, where the United Nations Assembly is held, at the end of which the Declaration will be signed (10 December 1948).
AFP
Before 1945 and the United Nations Charter, human rights simply did not exist in international law.
EPA/Neil Hall
Years after voting to leave the EU, the UK still has no clear plan of how to make Brexit work. These five articles chart the history of an intractable problem.
Shutterstock
These are the five options for Brexit: Theresa May’s withdrawal agreement, staying in the customs union, staying in the single market, the so-called Common Market 2.0 idea or a no-deal Brexit.
A ‘hard Brexit’ appears increasingly likely.
AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth
American companies still face enormous uncertainty about how they’ll be doing business in the UK and EU in the coming years, particularly as the April 12 Brexit deadline draws closer.
EPA/Will Oliver
It’s easy, now, to think of this as Theresa May’s story – but Thatcher, Blair and Cameron all played their part.
EPA/Stephanie LeCocq
One wrong turn after another has left the British prime minister cornered.
shutterstock
School textbooks from Germany deal with Europe in much greater detail and with more of a positive angle than those published in England.
ULKASTUDIO/Shutterstock
What is the Common Market 2.0 proposal, also known as Norway+ and what would it mean in practice?
Theresa May has been granted an extension, but not the one she wanted.
EPA/Stephanie Lecocq
Decades of consensus building have enabled the EU27 to show remarkable resilience and flexibility, despite chaos on the UK side
China and Italy’s presidents shake hands.
EPA-EFE/Alessandro Tarantino / Pool
Italy is neither the first, nor will it be the last European economy to follow its own national interest and look for Chinese support.
The UK will leave the EU on 29 March unless the UK government requests an extension to Article 50.
Shutterstock
UK parliamentary rules state that an amendment ‘which is the same, in substance’ as an issue that has already been voted on, cannot be proposed again in parliament.
EPA/Ludovic Marin
Fake news doesn’t respect borders so working together is the only option.
Jamie Oliver has a penchant for pasta.
Scandic Hotels
Once derided, UK food culture has improved out of sight thanks to Europe.
Outside the Houses of Parliament in London on March 14, 2019.
REUTERS/Henry Nicholls
Three scholars react to the spectacle, finger-pointing and long-term harms of the stalemate in British Parliament.
A frictionless border.
Remizov / Shutterstock.com
How to make sense of the UK government’s no-deal Brexit contingency plans to avoid a hard border in Ireland.
Hitler is not amused: an internet parody based on a scene from the film Downfall.
Hitler Rants Parodies
You can’t teach an algorithm to recognise when something is funny.
Other European cities have been quick to sense opportunities from Brexit.
Charles Hawley/Twitter
Always delicate balancing act, ensuring London maintains its appeal to tech start-ups will prove more difficult after Brexit.
Brian Lawless/PA Wire
What do Theresa May’s last minute Brexit guarantees mean for the Irish border?
Janvier 22, 2019, in Aix-La-Chapelle, France.
Ludovic Marin/AFP
As of March 1, the UN Security Council has been presided by two countries, France and Germany. It could be one of the few positive consequences of Brexit for the EU.
Looking on as police get ready to clear a migrant camp in San Ferdinando, Italy.
Marco Costantino/EPA
Demolition of migrant camps and changes to rules concerning who can access support has left many migrants in Italy on the streets.