Inside Aleppo, Syria's Most War-Torn City
To the victor go the spoils, but in Syria’s largest city there won’t be much left.
To the victor go the spoils, but in Syria’s largest city there won’t be much left.
Nurses, grave-diggers, and hospital staff worked tirelessly to stop the Ebola crisis in West Africa, but many frontline workers went uncompensated. Amy Maxmen's e-book tells their stories.
Ukraine's official language is Ukrainian, but Russian still dominates newspapers, TV shows, and businesses. Efforts to promote the Ukrainian language raise the question: who is really in charge?
Did NGOs profit from the Ebola epidemic while frontline nurses and other healthworkers went unpaid?
Gone are the days of gushers – we’re coaxing out glue, and struggling to move it after that. With oil prices crashing, are oil companies going to regret going after East Africa's waxy crude?
How indigenous crops can help bring food security to Ethiopia.
The recent discovery of oil in the poorest corner of Africa could have devastating results.
An investigation into the impact of the oil industry on one of the world's most environmentally and culturally sensitive sites.
Since the first week of July, Kobani has been under intense attack on all fronts. Though the results of the campaign are inconclusive, it’s clear that the Islamists are making incremental gains.
Fear is the real legacy of Putin's Russia, particularly in Russia's 342 "monotowns," single industry centers where economies are collapsing and dissent is not tolerated.
In Jerusalem, a city where borders mean everything, one stubborn man has made it his mission to record and warn others about changes to the city.
Why are young people fleeing Siberia?