BBC drama Bodyguard, which delves into the murky world of insider leaks in the police and security services.
BBC
Human resources departments need to understand that these days security and data breaches are more likely to come from within.
Rescue team members rest near an earthquake-devastated area during a search for victims under the ruins of collapsed buildings in Balaroa, Palu city, Central Sulawesi.
EPA Images
Developed countries focus on technology, but lullabies can sometimes have a greater effect.
Chile’s former dictator, General Augusto Pinochet.
EPA Images
Two decades ago, Chilean dictator Augusto Pinochet was arrested in London, putting human rights abuses in the limelight.
Guilio Napolitano/Shutterstock.
Some careful reasoning shows that comparing abortion with contract murder equates two acts that are far from obviously morally equivalent.
Gareth Lee outside the Supreme Court in London, as five justices at the UK’s highest court unanimously ruled that the Christian owners of a bakery did not discriminate against the gay rights activist on the ground of sexual orientation.
PA Images
What a cake can tell us about the law’s view of homosexuality, religion, freedom of expression and the value of civic equality
How do you solve a problem like Maduro?
EPA Images
Colombia’s new president Ivan Duque has some big issues in his inbox.
Jonathan Brady/PA
Study reveals Britons place a high value on having access to the Single Market and a ‘Norway-like’ deal is more popular than remaining or leaving without a deal but customs union is the worst option.
Jordanian Bedouin border guards on parade.
JAMAL NASRALLAH/EPA
The old ways of doing things still matter – it’s just that some of it now takes place online.
Quite the firecracker, isn’t he?
EPA/Melina Mara
The now-confirmed supreme court judge repeatedly lost his cool during his recent appearance in the senate. Is that what we need from lawmakers?
Professor Christine Blasey Ford gives her testimony.
EPA Images
Women, like men, are susceptible to bias when it comes to defending those in their ‘in-group’ from accountability for sexual assault.
The Yard are hungry for data. We shouldn’t feed it.
Nick Ansell/PA
Allowing the police unfettered use of vast databases of information will begin to tilt the balance of power towards totalitarianism.
Shutterstock
A new refugee mapping project has revealed an alternative image of Europe as a space that is being shaped by migrants and their struggle.
Would remainer Philip Hammond even mind?
PA/Yui Mok
If they really wanted another vote, members of parliament could rely on an very old principle known as ‘grievance before supply’.
M Rose/Shutterstock.com
The closure of a London pie shop raises questions regarding the relationship between food and identity.
Shutterstock.
Society teaches young people to avoid saying ‘no’, so they need more support to navigate the awkwardness of sex.
Bolsonaro: a vote for fascism?
EPA Images
Brazil could see a return to the dark days of the military dictatorship.
Party conference season proved the perfect opportunity to make a big promise.
PA/Victoria Jones
Stick with her until after Brexit and she’ll end all your problems – so Theresa May says.
Nadia Murad and Denis Mukwege: campaigners against sexual violence against women.
EPA-EFE/PATRICK SEEGER
The prize recognises that violence against women has become a weapon of war.
wavebreakmedia/ Shutterstock
The British government is consulting on changes to the Gender Recognition Act, including whether to allow gender self-identification.
Time for change.
Rajat Gupta/EPA
A series of brutal rapes in India has led to pressure to stop violence against women.
Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh testifies before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
EPA Images
The longstanding, historical notion of the judge as an independent, non-partisan interpreter of the law may never truly recover.
Shutterstock.
Social media can be a great tool to keep in touch with friends – but if you are already lonely, it could make things worse.
Onwards to a Brexit paradise regained.
tefan Rousseau/PA Wire/PA Images
Milton’s famous defence of free speech, Areopagitica, was a strange choice for the attorney general.
PA/Aaron Chown
A change in government could open the path for remaining in the EU. But would it resolve the matter once and for all?
Time is ticking to get a Brexit deal through parliament.
vasara/Shutterstock
If the UK does secure a deal with the EU, it’s not clear that parliament would back it. Here are some scenarios for what could happen next.