Crimea: The New Normal
Crimean officials ramp up homophobic rhetoric.
Crimean officials ramp up homophobic rhetoric.
Recent legislation in Turkey allows for new methods of urban transformation—and government intervention—in Istanbul's housing development.
Just one family of thousands forced to flee Syria after the eruption of war, the Koksals illustrate the tremendous hardships and complexities of the refugee population in Turkey.
Neglect and denial. According to Russian public health activists that's the Russian government’s strategy for tackling the challenge of HIV.
The Başıbüyük neighborhood in Istanbul offers two extremes of housing: shining new highrises and the rapidly disappearing squatter settlements of a previous generation.
The squatter settlements known as "Gecekondu" are quickly disappearing in Istanbul, a city that is being transformed through government intervention, historic renewal, and mass housing projects.
Multiple cameras recorded the moment of Turkish protester Ahmet Atakan's death, but does the footage prove anything?
Two deaths in Turkey reveal a deeply divided country.
An artist asks, "Why were we Armenian, but living in the U.S? Why was our family in Syria? What were these family stories of exile and slaughter? Why weren’t they in the history books of my youth?"
A small group of LGBT activists tries to change the situation in one of Russia's most homophobic cities.
Dmitry Chizhevsky came to a Rainbow Coffee party in Saint Petersburg, an LGBT gathering. Little did he know that a few moments later he would lose his eye in an attack.
Majority of Russians say that Lake Baikal should be the symbol of Russia. But in monotown Baikalsk hundreds of workers who lost their jobs this month say they feel cheated by Moscow.