Laura Lean/Alamy
Islamic State has fallen out of the public attention in the UK and Europe but remains active in Africa.
Laura Lean/Alamy
This case shows how national security is taking precedence over human rights concerns.
Vickie Flores / EPA-EFE
Knowing the number of people who have had their citizenship removed is crucial to holding a powerful government to account.
Shamima Begum recently lost her appeal to return to the UK after a Supreme Court ruling in February.
ITV/YouTube
Comparisons between Begum’s Islamic garb and her new wardrobe suggest that Muslim women’s “liberation” depends on westernisation.
Shamima Begum’s sister shows a photo of her after she left for Syria in 2015.
Laura Lean/PA Archive
A legal expert analyses the significance of a Court Appeal ruling allowing Shamima Begum to return to the UK from Syria to fight an appeal against the removal of her British citizenship.
Jack Letts: no longer a British citizen.
'Jihadi Jack' makes appeal to come home via SkyNews on YouTube
Why do people readily accept potentially unjust decisions by their government?
Women and children, reportedly the family of Islamic State fighters, at the Roj refugee camp in Hasakah, Syria in late February.
Murtaja Lateef/EPA
With more cases of women such as Shamima Begum expected, the UK is under legal obligations to protect the rights of any children involved.
An undated photo of Shamima Begum before she went to join Islamic State in 2015.
PA Wire/PA Images
What the law says about stripping people of their British citizenship.
Shamima Begum being interviewed by the BBC at a refugee camp in Syria.
BBC News via YouTube
Women used to be largely ignored by counter-radicalisation strategies. Why that changed.
A handout photo of Shamima Begum, who left London in 2015 to join Islamic State.
Metropolitan Police/PA Wire
A schoolgirl who left Bethnal Green to join Islamic State in Syria is now in a refugee camp and wants to return to the UK.