Protesters in South Africa, highlight the plight of immigrants forced into slavery in Libya.
EPA-EFE/Kim Ludbrook
The decision to repatriate migrants is a welcome intervention. But, it fails to consider the fundamental causes.
EPA/Ronald Wittek
The prime minister conceded that the UK must continue to abide by European Court of Justice rulings, even after Brexit.
Nationalists demonstrate in support of the controversial new Holocaust law.
EPA/Jacek Turczyk
Criminalising suggestions that Poland was complicit in German atrocities during World War II denies history and will hinder scholarship.
shutterstock.com
Nissan might have promised post-Brexit investment, but leaving the single market and customs union could change everything for the UK.
Albinfo/Wikipedia
The European Investment Bank’s funding of the Trans Adriatic Pipeline will harm the climate and makes little financial sense.
EPA/Jakub Kaczmarczyk
Reforms to the judiciary are a threat to democracy – and that affects us all.
via shutterstock.com
What the EU and UK agree and disagree on when it comes to the transition period after Brexit.
US President Donald Trump in 2017 and George W. Bush in 2008.
White House/Wikipedia
On March 1, Donald Trump imposed a series of steel and aluminum tariffs. To understand their potential impact, it’s instructive to look at what happened after George W. Bush enacted similar measures in 2002.
On the periphery.
Stefan Rousseau/PA Wire
The French president has a vision for a more integrated Europe – and Brexit feeds right into that.
Take two.
Anthony Devlin/PA Archive
Nigel Farage says he is now more open to the idea of a second Brexit referendum. Is that a good or bad idea?
Viktor Orbán.
EPA/Lukas Barth
Poland and Hungary have recently clashed with Brussels over democratic freedoms, but economic drivers are at play, too.
19th Century Fox.
EPA
The two things UK must do to survive Brexit.
French President Emmanuel Macron (right) talks to European Parliament, president Antonio Tajani (left) and Luxembourg’s prime minister, Xavier Bettel (center), during the Gothenburg summit on November 17, 2017.
Ludovic Marin/AFP
The final report of the EU’s summit in Sweden makes generous use of the adjective “fair”. With populism and xenophobia are on the rise, could this be the basis of a new narrative for Europe?
Cod and other fish may be unintentionally caught by pulse trawlers.
saltmedia/Shutterstock
An expert reviews the research for and against the use of electric pulse trawlers.
EPA/Szilard Koszticsak
Several post-communist member states are moving further and further away from European Union norms.
Shutterstock
The Chinese zodiac predicts justice, openness, tolerance and innovation for the year ahead. After a difficult political year, it could be just the tonic.
EPA/Julien Warnand
A group of 25 EU countries is to work together more closely than ever before to develop military capabilities.
Atstock Productions/Shutterstock
The law can both make and break criminals.
The Working Time Directive is designed to stop this kind of behaviour.
shutterstock.com
The Working Time Directive enshrines legal rights to rest periods, paid holidays and a maximum 48-hour working week.
Imported laptop housings, Guiyu, China.
Basel Action Network
China, which recycles much of the world’s waste material, is slashing its scrap imports. This move could force the United States and Europe to boost recycling instead of shipping trash overseas.