Lamine Diack during the 15th IAAF World Athletics Championships, Beijing 2015.
Photo by Lintao Zhang/Getty Images for IAAF
Lamine Diack’s life revolved around politics and sports.
Supporters of Gambia’s president, Adama Barrow, sing and dance during a campaign rally in Banjul on November 27, 2021.
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The 2021 presidential election in The Gambia is expected to be peaceful and losing candidates are likely to accept the outcome.
Boris Johnson and Joe Biden greet each other at the COP26 UN climate conference.
Robert Perry / EPA-EFE
Politicians have more incentive to react to current climate disasters, but more investment is needed in preparing for future problems.
Nicaragua’s power couple, Vice President Rosario Murillo and husband President Daniel Ortega.
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The rule of Daniel Ortega has become increasingly authoritarian. Sanctions and repression could destabilize the region and result in increased numbers of refugees.
For some Indigenous people, participating in Canadian elections continues the legitimacy of the Canadian state.
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Indigenous people who vote are reminding Canada of the nation-to-nation relationships that continue to exist and to bring change from within the very structure that has been used to erase them.
Residents contend with the flooding after a downpour in Accra, Ghana.
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The fast growth of the metropolis and the city’s political significance, to its large informal economy and the challenges residents face.
Religion plays a significant role in governance in sub-Saharan Africa.
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Civil society can play a role by holding political authorities accountable.
Pope John Paul II met with President Ronald Reagan in Miami in 1987.
AP Photo/Arturo Mari, File
Joe Biden may be only the country’s second Catholic president, but a long line of U.S. leaders have met with popes over the years.
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The satirical magazine has long been a unique example of conservatism and iconoclasm.
Justices of the U.S. Supreme Court on December 3, 2018, in Washington.
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Despite a historically diverse high court, its voting rules often fail to include minority viewpoints. That could be avoided if justices decided their cases by unanimous vote.
Students who take political science classes in college are more likely to be civically engaged.
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Taking just one political science class makes college students more likely to show up at the polls, two researchers find.
We can’t afford to overlook the effects of a worsening climate.
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Humanity faces an extraordinary threat - why are so many of us not motivated into action?
EPA/Andy Rain
Politics has become a low-trust, high-blame environment that has left public servants under near constant threat of attack.
NDP Leader Jagmeet Singh during a visit to Québec City on Sept. 3. During the campaign, he didn’t show that he really understood Québec issues.
The Canadian Press/Adrian Wyld
The NDP had disappointing results in Québec during the federal election. The party must do some serious introspection.
Lukas Coch/AAP
The Australian people will be best served by separating science from politics.
Late Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika’s, seen in this 2004 photograph, is one leader whose legacy will linger for long.
Photo by Hocine Zaourar/AFP via Getty Images
Bouteflica’s two decades in power were the most damaging Algeria had experienced since independence from France in 1962.
Red sky at night, federal workers take fright?
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Congress is working on a spending bill to avert another government shutdown. Scholars explain what’s in store if they fail.
AAP/Lukas Coch
Politics with Michelle Grattan: The push to run independents on issues of climate and integrity
Michelle Grattan discusses the rise of independent candidates in the 2022 federal election and how their campaigns will be helped by a big war chest and plenty of strategic advice
Another door closes on federal police reform.
Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images
Months of bipartisan talks in Congress aimed at reaching consensus over policing reforms have ended with no agreement. Two policing scholars argue that federal efforts are better placed focusing on supporting local measures.
Guido Bergmann / EPA
Only 7% of Australia’s federal MPs have backgrounds in science. What would it look like if they were a majority?