Incitement to hatred law in England and Wales currently protects many identities, but not disability.
The @RoguePOTUSStaff account claims to be a genuine inside source of West Wing dirt, and hundreds of thousands of people seem to trust it.
Can the world’s progressives build their own international movement?
The television dramas have not exaggerated the horrors of the slave trade. The reality was often even worse for Africans taken from their homes.
England’s rugby team was flummoxed by a new tactic deployed by Italy in the Six Nations – even though it was within the rules.
EU citizens are being treated as pawns ahead of Brexit negotiations. This has happened before, at the height of the Cold War.
The two ruling parties live by the letter of the Good Friday Agreement, but not the spirit.
He’s got Le Pen rattled at an important phase in the election campaign, even without a manifesto.
The United Nations has seldom been under more pressure to prove it’s valuable. But it might have found a way.
Sweden’s crime rate is not affected by the immigration rate and the state has introduced stricter asylum laws.
The House of Commons’ longest-serving MP has died, aged 86.
Not even psychiatrists themselves can agree on what ‘mental illness’ is.
The Facebook CEO’s vision for a digital future still needs a little work.
If you think Brexit will be the issue that brings elections to the upper chamber, think again.
The US president’s attack on confidential sources is one of many legal and technological threats to public interest journalism, as a new report shows
The great British curry crisis.
Families are suffering emotionally and financially because of the minimum income threshold in the UK’s family migration rules.
A victory in its second-biggest city would be a spectacular turnaround, but the country still has years or even decades of rebuilding ahead of it.
It held on in Stoke, but Labour has suffered a humiliating defeat to the governing party in Copeland.
Sufis have remained defiant after a suicide bombing at a shrine in Pakistan.
We know where Jeremy Corbyn stands on certain issues, but where is the vision? What are the ideas?
The party picked the wrong candidate and the wrong tactics in this byelection, and it showed in the result.
A new reform bill will not fix the prison problem: too many people are being incarcerated.
Eight decades after it was first mooted, the world needs a mechanism to prosecute cross-border terrorists in peacetime.
Taking on a 45,000-strong organisation, with a budget of more than £2.5 billion would stretch the most seasoned corporate executive.