Weighing up restorative justice.
Zolnierek/www.shutterstock.com
MPs have proposed that restorative justice should eventually become a right in the UK.
Runner and rider.
Wikimedia Commons
With two months to go, the numbers seem to favour Hillary Clinton more heavily than ever. But it pays to look more closely.
EPA/STR
We’re unlikely to see the Syrian leader face charges for crimes against humanity any time soon.
www.shutterstock.com
Canada has been in the global doldrums for close to two decades, but now it’s got a chance to get back in the game.
Piyal Adhikary/EPA
Called a saint in her lifetime, it has not been a straightforward process to canonise Mother Teresa.
Are you being served?
Lee Carson
Scotland’s new deprivation figures confirm a wider trend towards suburbanising poverty.
Gage Skidmore
The Republican nominee is far from the blithering idiot his opponents like to portray.
Don’t turn off the lights.
Sam72/www.shutterstock.com
It is no threat to UK sovereignty and protects vulnerable citizens – so why replace the Human Rights Act?
EPA
Almost 70 years after Indian independence, tribes once classed as criminals are still fighting for their freedom.
Syrian refugees rescued off the coast of Greece in 2015.
Wikimedia Commons
Syrians are the latest high profile refugees to arrive on British shores – what can history tell us about their prospects?
Colombians celebrate the peace agreement.
Christian Escobar Mora/EPA
History was made with the agreement between the Colombian government and the FARC. Making the gesture a reality will require a concerted effort from all involved.
Protests in Karachi against Altaf Hussain, the British-based Pakistani politician.
Rean Khan/EPA
Could this be the end of the road for the London-based leader of Pakistani’s Muttahida Qaumi Movement?
Shutterstock
Inmates are getting older, which make us think about whether custody is the best option for this group.
UN secretary-general Dag Hammarskjold lands in Israel.
http://www.gpo.gov.il
Attempts to outlaw the practice have proven difficult, thanks to a tendency on the part of leaders to skirt around the rules.
Aaron Ufumeli/EPA
Zimbabwe’s ruling party is facing a wave of online and offline protest.
Orban is on a high after the Brexit vote.
EPA/Olivier Hoslet
Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has caught referendum fever. He is giving his public a vote on refugee policy in what is being seen as a two-fingered salute to the EU.
EPA/Sedat Suna
Ankara’s real target in Syria is the Kurds, but is Turkey getting bogged down on too many fronts?
Stacey Newman//shutterstock.com
More than 50 animals in a Venezuelan zoo have reportedly died from starvation in the past few months.
The joke’s on LIttlejohn.
Press Gazette
Satire should be a way of keeping the powerful in check, not sneering at the powerless.
Lucy Fisher
Research shows the public has a poor understanding of what slavery is and how often they encounter it. Here’s how to tell if your manicurist is working against their will.
Javier Novo Rodríguez
With tensions already high, telling Muslim women not to dress a certain way at the beach will only make things worse.
PA/Anna Gowthorpe
After 12 years, the anti-war party is shutting down, raising questions about what the future holds for its firebrand leader.
Kremlin/Ru
Cooperation between Tehran and Moscow is strictly limited to Syria.
pcruciatti/Shutterstock.com
Research shows how locals thrive from adapting to the heritage cultures of their new neighbours.
Anjem Choudary: a man the press love to hate.
Anthony Devlin / PA Archive/Press Association Images
The press is giving audiences the wrong idea about Britain’s Muslims when it courts with extremists.