Want to Help Mothers This Mother’s Day? Back a Guaranteed Income

Happy Mother’s Day—because that’s what you’re supposed to say, right? Motherhood is always dressed up in soft language like community, support, and…“it takes a village.” But...

This election signals a crisis for the British state

We don’t know everything yet. But it’s clear that Scotland and Wales have both elected pro-independence governments, led by the Scottish National Party and...

Tamil Nadu Assembly Elections: How a newcomer thrashed a veteran’s ambitions

Every election season, the same question comes up again, at least in the Bharatiya Janata Party’s office: Why is Tamil Nadu still such a...

The Climate Reckoning That the Nuclear Arms Control Can’t Ignore

At 8:15 AM on August 6, 1945, a 9,000-pound atomic bomb detonated 1,900 feet above Hiroshima, instantly killing 70,000 people. Three days later, a second...

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Want to Help Mothers This Mother’s Day? Back a Guaranteed Income

Happy Mother’s Day—because that’s what you’re supposed to say,...

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International essay-writing competition for youth – 2026

Have you seen something unfair in your community and...

This election signals a crisis for the British state

We don’t know everything yet. But it’s clear that...

Tamil Nadu Assembly Elections: How a newcomer thrashed a veteran’s ambitions

Every election season, the same question comes up again,...

Want to Help Mothers This Mother’s Day? Back a Guaranteed Income

Happy Mother’s Day—because that’s what you’re supposed to say, right? Motherhood is always dressed up in soft language like community, support, and…“it takes a village.” But...

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This election signals a crisis for the British state

We don’t know everything yet. But it’s clear that...

How did an Afghan woman journalist’s writing resonate in China?

When Afghan journalist Khadija Haidary fled the Taliban, she never imagined that her writing would reach readers thousands of miles away in China. Yet it did — prompting small but meaningful acts of support that empowered her to move forward amid her uncertain situation. In China, where civil society is tightly regulated and spontaneous cross-border humanitarian support is rare, her letters, which evolved into a book titled “A Letter from an Afghan Woman,” sparked an unexpected cross-border solidarity with the oppressed women from far away. Rather than forming a visible movement, these responses took shape as quiet, individual acts, revealing how solidarity adapts under constraint.

How Israel’s Unprecedented Killing of Palestinian Journalists in Gaza Makes Accountability Reporting Almost Impossible 

Jumping from the top of a truck, Gazan journalist Anas Al‑Sharif landed in the arms of his best friend, Saleh Al‑Ja’farawi, with a joy that felt almost borrowed from another world, brief, bright, and impossibly alive amid a landscape cratered by warplanes.

When technology fails women: Online abuse and Nigeria’s digital weak points

This post is part of Global Voices’ April 2026 Spotlight series, “Human perspectives on AI.” This series will offer insight into how AI is being used in global majority countries, how its use....

Healthocide? Why the attack on the Pasteur Institute of Iran is more than a war crime

On 2 April, the United States and Israel bombed the 106-year-old Pasteur Institute, targeting one of Iran’s oldest and most critical public health institutions. Established in 1920, the institute has long been central to vaccine production, infectious disease surveillance, and epidemiological research in the Middle East and beyond.

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