Passions run high in Buenos Aires.
EPA/Cezaro de Luca
The decades-old dispute in the South Atlantic is the third rail of Argentine politics – and Mauricio Macri has blithely tripped over it.
Nottingham City Council are in trouble over a series of anti-begging posters – it’s important to know if their claims stack up.
racorn/www.shutterstock.com
Inequality for those left behind is a necessary byproduct of rewarding those who excel.
Barry Tuck via Shutterstock
Like the League of Nations before it, the UN is often dismissed as a powerless talking shop or a proxy for the great powers. It’s much more than that.
The 200 men of the Jarrow crusade on their march to London in 1936.
PA Archive
Why the 200 men who marched from the north-east to London in October 1936 must not be forgotten.
EPA/Monika Skolimowska
The UN’s Charter legally binds it to promote gender equality, but guess what: yes, it’s a man again.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
Her closing conference speech promised a plan to regain the centre and look after those in need, but the prime minister never quite got round to delivering it.
Syrians arrive at Fiumicino Airport in Rome in February.
Telenews/EPA
Safe passage for vulnerable refugees could help stop thousands from making a perilous journey across the Mediterranean.
This guy?
EPA/Andrew Gombert
Donald Trump talks over women, refuses to listen, won’t take control of his bad habits – enough already.
PA/Stefan Rousseau
A look back at the polls shows just how popular Theresa May’s predecessor was.
Chamberlain square in Birmingham.
Shutterstock
Joseph Chamberlain tried to reconcile international trade with the needs of British workers and failed. Can Theresa May really succeed?
British soldiers on the outskirts of Basra in 2007.
Cathal McNaughton / PA Archive
The UK government plans to suspend parts of the European Convention on Human Rights in future conflicts.
The Conservative Party shop opens for business in Birmingham.
EPA/Facundo Arrizabalaga
Half the party banged on about Europe so much they got a referendum. Now the Conservatives are divided about what happens now.
Where Tories fear to tread.
PA/Owen Humphreys
Despite efforts to appeal to the minds and the wallets of those in the north, the Tories have yet to win hearts.
Mistakes happen: a polling station in Cali, Colombia.
EPA/Christian Escobar Mora
A look through the ballot papers shows the declared result in Colombia’s crucial vote is far from definitive.
South Sudan’s violent crisis is a refugee crisis too.
EPA/JM Lopez
Even the UN Security Council’s most stubborn members have committed to defending South Sudan’s residents against violence.
Doing his best?
Steve Parsons/PA
Labour once claimed racial equality as its turf, but the Tories are fighting back to woo this key demographic.
The so-called Calais jungle, now home to thousands of displaced Syrians.
Chris Radburn / PA Wire/Press Association Images
There is precedent for mass rehoming: just look at what happened to the Ugandan Asian population.
A mural in Toxteth, Liverpool, a key historic area for immigration in the city.
Victoria Canning
Uncertainty and injustice have become the staple diet of the British asylum system.
Hauke Sandhaus
The government is taking back control of British law with great eagerness. Here’s what to look out for.
Going about their business.
EPA/Christian Escobar Mora
Given their chance to ratify a deal to end a 60-year war, less than 40% of Colombians voted – and they threw it out.
Waving in a new kind of sovereignty?
PA/Stefan Rousseau
Theresa May gave the green light to leave the European union and turned it into a mandate to make all the decisions herself.
Filipinos protest after a huge bombing in Davao.
EPA/Eugenio Loreto
A major insurgency is humiliating the Filipino army and sucking in huge ransoms – but all anyone wants to talk about is Islamic State.
Viktor Orbán speaks in Budapest after the Hungary referendum result.
Szilard Koszticsak/EPA
The prime minister has claimed victory in the referendum, despite the low turnout.
Raul Castro: balancing act.
EPA
Whoever wins the keys to the White House in November, it is far from guaranteed that Barack Obama’s detente with the Cubans will continue.