Missing People Choir raise awareness in the grand final of ITV’s Britain’s Got Talent.
ITV
99% of people who disappear come home again. A third of them don’t stay.
EPA/Christophe Archambault
A huge number of new politicians have joined the National Assembly after the 2017 election.
Prayers in the street in Finsbury Park after the attack on June 19.
Yui Mok/PA Wire
A man has been arrested after driving a van into worshippers near a mosque in north London.
A treaty on citizens’ rights would reassure a lot of worried people.
EPA/Andy Rain
A treaty on citizens’ rights in a moral obligation and legally possible too.
Javier Duarte, former governor of the Mexican state Veracruz, after his arrest.
EPA/Esteban Biba
When corruption becomes truly entrenched in a state, it can seem impossible to uproot. But Mexicans are still fighting it.
Popular populist.
EPA/CRISTINO
Anti-American and anti-corruption stances have given the president of the Philippines broad appeal.
Facundo Arrizabalaga/EPA
No one party is responsible for the disaster: local or national, Labour or Conservative – they all are.
Memorial to early 1990s war in Sarajevo, Bosnia.
Clay Gilliland
Everyone has forgotten there were almost as many asylum seekers in Europe in the early 1990s as today.
PA
The Good Friday Agreement’s UN treaty status means that any compromise of the rigorous impartiality it demands of the Government could be legally challenged
from www.shutterstock.com
Amid calls for arrests, a law expert explains what the offence actually entails.
Don’t look away.
Rick Findler/PA Wire/PA Images
Readers and viewers the world over are becoming numb to catastrophe and suffering. They must not look away.
Should I stay or should I go? More and more dads are staying at home.
Aleutie/shutterstock
The last recession put more men in the position of full-time child carers. How are they coping?
Jean-Claude Juncker and Michel Barnier: ready whenever you are.
Patrick Seeger/EPA
The balance of power in Brexit talks is firmly with the EU.
Cutting through: Jeremy Corbyn’s Facebook page.
Facebook
Steve Howell believes that broadcasting regulations to ensure balance and a mastery of social media allowed people to see the Labour leader as he really is.
Few saw Labour’s result coming.
PA/Peter Byrne
The pollsters have had another bad year – and it may be because they were so worried about repeating the mistakes of 2015.
Arlene Foster and Nigel Dodds arrive at Downing Street for talks.
Dominic Lipinski/PA
What happens behind the scenes when one party props up another’s minority government.
IvanKurmyshov/Shutterstock
What’s so ‘brotherly’ about a major diplomatic spat?
Join us.
Helen Jarvis
Great Get Togethers are being held to mark the anniversary of the Labour MP’s death.
Hadrian via Shutterstock.com
The demise of the UK’s tabloids has been exaggerated in the aftermath of the recent election.
EPA/Yousseff Rabie Yousseff
The sustained assault on IS’s two main strongholds could be followed by years of local and global insurgency.
Central square in the Iraqi Kurdish capital, Erbil.
Eng. Bilal Izzadin
Iraqi Kurds will vote Yes to independence in September – and it could lead to trouble.
Does Trump even want a seat at the table?
EPA/Matt Dunham
For all the president’s unpredictability, America’s core interests remain the same.
Youth on the march.
melis/shutterstock
Yes, young voters’ choices had an impact, but not a decisive one.
Claudio Divizia via Shutterstock.com
If you are looking for an in-depth analysis of how the pre-election media campaign went for the two main parties, here is the data.
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A podcast on what music does to our brains, and why it moves us.