Philip Kleinfeld
An Interview with India's Most Wanted Cartoonist
Aseem Trivedi faced a lifelong prison sentence for his drawings slamming corruption in his country. We spoke to him about the power cartoonists can yield, and why governments are trying harder and harder to silence them.
How Hungary's Anti-Semitic Far-Right Poster Boy Found Out He Was a Jew
In 2006, Csanád Szegedi was Vice President of the country's virulently anti-semitic Jobbik Party. Then, his career came tumbling down after it emerged that his family had survived Auschwitz and Nazi labour camps.
How Salaries Became Everybody's Business
It was once the ultimate taboo, so where did the campaign to find out what everyone gets paid come from, and who's pushing it?
What's Behind the Worldwide Decline of Democracy?
From Donald Trump, Hungary's xenophobic prime minister Viktor Orbán, post-coup Turkey, and Africa's "third-term problem" of leaders clinging to power, the past few months haven't exactly looked good for democracy.
Why We Need to Rid Football of Commercialism
Joe Kennedy, author of 'Games Without Frontiers', argues that overpriced tickets and obsessing over stats has distracted us from football's true meaning.
Who Are the Green Brigade, the Celtic Fans Raising Money for Palestine?
From chatting in pubs to pissing off UEFA and raising hundreds of thousands of pounds.
Three Lions, Fat Les and the Far Right: How the England Team Affects National Identity
The BNP would struggle with its message on the terraces today, because the story of British football is the story of mass migration.
This Syrian Architect Stayed Behind to Rebuild Her War-Torn City
Over 60 percent of Homs has been destroyed, but architect Marwa al-Sabouni has stayed behind, "trying to rebuild the pieces around me."
How Will the Brussels Attacks Change the 'Brexit' Debate?
Counter-terror is becoming a political football as Britain decides whether to stay in Europe.