Jeremy Corbyn makes a statement after Labour’s meeting to decide its final manifesto commitments.
Dominc Lipinski/PA
After years on the fence, Labour now has a position on the biggest topic of the day.
Young married Catholic couples in the 1960s were subject to strict religious teachings that decreed artificial contraception unacceptable.
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The ban on the pill led to much sorrow and frustration, but determined couples found imaginative ways to cope and work around it.
The main parties are fighting a fierce battle on social media platforms.
Yui Mok/PA Wire/PA Images
A close look at the way the parties are using video in the campaign can tell you a lot about their approach.
Sasha Freemind/Unsplash
More attention needs to be paid to loneliness’s complex history.
Preparing for a clash with police at the Chinese University of Hong Kong.
Jerome Favre/EPA
How the protest movement in Hong Kong moved onto university campuses – by two researchers who have witnessed the unfolding events.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Things could have been quite different if Jeremy Corbyn swung more decisively to Remain or if Jo Swinson hadn’t been in such a rush to the polls.
The Armenian diaspora out in force in Los Angeles in April 2019.
Etienne Laurent/EPA
A recent vote in the US House of Representatives recognised the Armenian massacre of 1915 as a genocide in a significant moment for the Armenian diaspora.
Xi Jingping with Greek president Prokopis Pavlopoulos in Athens.
EPA
Where else were all those hard-headed refusals to make things easier for the eurozone strugglers going to lead?
Lenscap Photography via Shutterstock
Analysis of the first week of the campaign shows that not all publicity is good publicity.
Andy Rain/EPA
Deeply divisive issues like Brexit are seeping into the way people interact with one another, undermining trust and tolerance of others.
Police fire tear gas to deter protesters in Hong Kong.
Jerome Favre/EPA
Two deaths and video of a police man shooting a protester have hardened attitudes of Hong Kongers against the police.
Joe Giddens/PA
The Brexit Party’s most baffling decision is to continue to fight key Labour-held seats. But all is not what it seems.
Fanning flames.
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According to research, a strong sense of social identity and empowerment often dictates how rioters behave.
shutterstock.
Ink Drop via Shutterstock
It looks as if the Conservative P\arty has learned from the way Labour targeted the youth vote in 2017.
Jez-ebel.
Andrew Milligan/PA
With Labour in danger of coming fourth in Scotland, they could have done without fresh independence trouble.
Competing voices: alt-media personalities Tom Harwood of Guido Fawkes, left, and Ash Sarkar of Novara Media.
Screenshot from Joe.com
A new genre of political media is influencing people that mainstream commentators seem unable to reach.
Scotland’s first minister on the campaign trail.
PA/Andrew Milligan
It is still not easy to reach firm conclusions about Scotland’s Curriculum for Excellence.
Keir Starmer was recently made to look stupid in a video edited by the Conservative party.
GMB
It’s a slippery slope from satire to dangerous deepfakes.
Shutterstock/AlexLMX
The game is a major part of John Major’s political legacy.
Citizens face a barrage of polling information before an election and evidence suggests they don’t know what to do with it.
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Study shows voters struggle to take media bias into account – even when they are explicitely told it’s there.
Students wear Guy Fawkes masks during a protest on November 5 in Hong Kong.
Jerome Favre/EPA
From Chile to Lebanon and Iraq to Hong Kong, the same masks have become a common language to register dissent.
Rivals: UK prime minister Boris Johnson, right, and opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn at the Remembrance Day ceremony in London, November 11 2019.
EPA-EFE/Andy Rain
As the election campaign hots up we explore how the parties are exploiting videos on their social media accounts.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire/PA Images
From Boris Johnson to Donald Trump, a new breed of bullshitting politicians is flourishing.
shutterstock/ PA Alexandros Michailidis
“We now have a leave alliance”.
Peter Foley/EPA
Recent events in Bolivia represent both a military coup d'état and a moment of mass protest.