Women look at a screen displaying exchange rate at a currency exchange office in St. Petersburg, Russia. The Russian currency has plunged against the U.S. dollar after the West imposed severe economic sanctions.
(AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky)
Some economic sanctions may violate international law principles, including those the sanctions are intended to enforce. They may therefore undermine the very legal regimes Canadians champion.
Voting at the United Nations General Assembly special session on Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images
Namibia’s refusal to condemn Russia undermines the credibility of its claims to support sovereignty, territorial integrity, and self-determination of all nations.
Two men speak in the backyard of a house damaged by a Russian airstrike, according to locals, in Gorenka, Ukraine, March 2, 2022.
AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda
Over centuries, theory on just war has developed six main criteria for assessing conflicts.
Rafael Mariano Grossi, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency, points to the training facility hit by Russian artillery at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant.
AP Photo/Lisa Leutner
The world held its collective breath as Russian troops battled Ukrainian forces at the Zaporizhzhia nuclear power plant. The battle is over and no radiation escaped, but the danger is far from over.
Putin has kept most oligarchs at a distance – literally and figuratively.
Alexey Nikolsky/Sputnik/AFP via Getty Images
An expert on oligarchs explains how they came to be Russia’s richest and most powerful people and scrutinizes their relationship with Putin.
Russian police have detained thousands of Russians who have taken to the streets to protest the invasion of Ukraine.
AP Photo/Dmitri Lovetsky
Sanctions follow a ‘punishment logic,’ which often hurts the wrong people – and will likely weaken an already beleaguered Russian opposition.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy has been lauded for his resistance to the Russian invasion.
Photo by Laurent Van der Stockt for Le Monde/Getty Images
A political philosopher explains the moral symbolism ascribed to Zelenskyy’s ‘heroism’ and why he offers hope to those who hold democracy dear.
Flare landing on the nuclear power station, seen on a screen grab taken from a surveillance camera .
YOUTUBE/Zaporizhzhya NPP
Trouble may arise if the operating reactor is shut down, with risks ranging from a used fuel meltdown to a reactor core explosion.
Screengrab of unarmed Ukrainian civilians trying to stop Russian convoys.
Twitter
Nonviolent protest could also prove effective in stopping hostilities in Ukraine.
Distraught: Russian soldiers’ mothers with pictures of their sons killed in Chechnya, 1995.
EPA/Sergei Chirikov
Soldiers’ mothers have a history of opposing Russian wars.
Graffiti by the artist J.Warx in Valencia, Spain.
EPA-EFE/JUAN CARLOS CARDENAS
It may be soft power, but it still packs a punch.
flagsshutterstock.
China has suggested it could negotiate on behalf of the world with Russia, but what are the implications of that?
These charity leaders teamed up to fundraise on March 3, 2022, for refugees fleeing Ukraine.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Images via Getty Images
Give with your head, not just your heart, advises a scholar who has studied donations made after disasters and other crises.
Isolated: Vladimir Putin in a video conference with his Security Council.
EPA-EFE/Andrey Gorshkov/Kremlin pool/Sputnik
The Russian president has already shown he will come down hard on domestic opposition to the war in Ukraine.
AP
The fire at Europe’s largest nuclear power plant in southern Ukraine understandably raised the spectre of the 1986 Chernobyl disaster. But thankfully this time another nuclear catastrophe was avoided.
MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV / KREMLIN POOL / SPUTNIK/ EPA
While some oligarchs have broken ranks with the Kremlin, there is no sign yet other elites are so discontented as to take action against Putin.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, listens to Russian Roscosmos head Dmitry Rogozin during a meeting in the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia on Feb. 20, 2021.
(Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
The impact of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine reaches into outer space, as Russia threatens to stop co-operating on supplying and participating in space missions.
In this 1919 caricature, Ukrainians are surrounded by a Bolshevik (to the north, man with hat and red star), a Russian White Army soldier (to the east, with Russian eagle flag and a short whip), and to the west a Polish soldier, a Hungarian (in pink uniform) and two Romanian soldiers.
Wikimedia Commons
Borderlands are all about diversity and competing understandings of community and nation.
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz sit far apart during talks in the Kremlin in Moscow a week before Russia invaded Ukraine.
(Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)
Just because deep-rooted Russian fears might not seem reasonable doesn’t mean they aren’t real in Vladimir Putin’s mind.
War is hell: protesters gather in Warsaw.
EPA-EFE/ Marcin Obara
Truth may be the first casualty of war, but knowledge and expertise is all the more important.