Kindertransport documents for three children who travelled from Austria to the UK in 1939.
Jewish Chronicle Archive/Heritage-Images
The visa waiver scheme saved thousands of Jewish children from persecution – but at a huge cost.
Women MPs take to the terrace of the House of Commons in 1931.
PA Archive
It’s 100 years since women won the right to be MPs, but what was Parliament like for women back then?
I don’t.
Nathings/Shutterstock
No-fault divorce, or no reason at all – how a revolution in divorce law has come about.
Democrat Beto O'Rourke lost in Texas, but many expect to see him return in the 2020 presidential race.
EPA Images
The Democrats are currently about 57% to 43% favourites over the Republicans to win the presidency – if you trust the markets.
Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock
How a child reacted to Theresa May’s comments that Brexit would stop EU citizens from ‘jumping the queue’ to come to the UK.
Steve Parsons/PA Wire
Civil society groups continue to fight against the creeping demands of the UK’s immigration system.
The Rainbow Pride flag.
Shutterstock
Changes that protect or increase human rights should always be welcomed – but we should check motives, too.
Use of novel psychoactive substances may have shrunk, but the harms have widened.
GreenZeb
The government’s own review of its legislation to tackle ‘legal highs’ reveals the unintended consequences of the law – consequences we predicted.
Tick tock.
Ivan Marc/Shutterstock
What role do EU institutions and the parliaments of 27 member states have in agreeing the next steps of the Brexit process.
Hadrian via Shutterstock
The tone remains the same, but the anger is directed against a different group of ‘elites’.
A young member of the migrant caravan at a shelter in Tijuana, Mexico.
EPA Images
Migrants are being portrayed as a enemy that can legitimately be targeted – and even killed – by the military.
Gove: staying for now.
Victoria Jones/PA Wire
And why it’s not enough to be against the Withdrawal Agreement.
UN envoy Philip Alston hears from people in Newcastle.
© Bassam Khawaja 2018
The UN’s special rapporteur on extreme poverty has given a damning indictment of how austerity has hit the UK. A former UN envoy explains why his calls to uphold social rights are so crucial.
pixelrain/Shutterstock
The prime minister’s office has promoted tweets in favour of the Brexit deal – why that’s a problem.
Doing her best.
Matt Dunham/PA Wire/PA Images
Controlling immigration was the most important concern for Brexit voters and May’s deal does that.
The Snark – the beastly figment of imagination created by Lewis Carroll.
Lewis Carroll
Like Lewis Carroll’s nonsense poem, the Brexit target was a figment of everyone’s imagination.
Norman Geras was clear in his work that revolutionary violence should be a last resort.
Eugene Delacroix
The University of Reading wrongly judged that Geras’ essay, which discusses political violence, might fall foul of the government’s Prevent strategy.
Remembering Amal Fathy in Carlisle.
Mark Harkin via Flickr
Amal Fathy spoke out about sexual harassment – and is now languishing in jail. She is not alone.–
Divided Britain.
EPA-EFE/Andy Rain
Theresa May’s Brexit plan has crumbled on contact with the reality of UK and EU politics.
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As the US excludes nations from the established system, China is offering them an alternative. And America will pay the price.
Deal in hand.
EPA-EFE/Andy Rain
Academic experts explain the key details of the draft Brexit deal agreed by UK and EU negotiators.
The cabinet hangs together, for now.
Victoria Jones/PA Wire
Theresa May still faces a huge hurdle to get MPs in Westminster to agree to the Brexit deal.
Ivan Marc / Shutterstock
The deal now needs to be agreed by UK MPs and each EU member state.
A frame from a comic by the organisation PositivesNegatives.
Copyright: Positive Negatives, illustration by Gabi Froden
A series of recent comics are trying to shift the narrative about refugees.
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Will Obamacare – and Donald Trump – survive?