'Working in the Shadows,' Iona Craig Reflects While Reporting in Yemen
Iona Craig's first day back in Yemen: "Aden airport has been spruced up since my last visit when the roof was caved in and bullet holes riddled the glass doors."
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Iona Craig's first day back in Yemen: "Aden airport has been spruced up since my last visit when the roof was caved in and bullet holes riddled the glass doors."
Marine Le Pen of the National Front loses historic vote for the French presidency.
South Sudan is on the edge of collapse. Murderous raids on civilian communities are a favored tactic, and UN peacekeepers have been criticized for not doing more to stop them.
David Maurice Smith documented the lives of people in the northern Ontario community, some of whom still suffer from the trickle-down impact of residential schools, extinguished only in 1996.
People of the Parting Rocks: Gaining cultural context of the Indigenous suicide crisis facing the Cree community of Attawapiskat.
To heal the deep wounds left by a dark colonial history and a recent suicide crisis, the Canadian First Nations community of Attawapiskat looks to reconnect with the land and their traditions.
Fifteen years ago in Kembatta-Tembaro, Ethiopia, virtually every girl underwent the rite of passage known as FGM. Today the generations-old tradition has been abandoned.
Can Marine Le Pen really remake France's National Front?
When Alcoa arrived to mine Suriname in 1964, it pushed the slave-descended Saamaka off their land. As the Pittsburgh icon prepares to leave the country, the Saamaka fight for their rights.
Day in and day out, Malawian women are at risk cooking on open fires and polluting stoves.
Mexicans call it, “The Wall of Shame”. What does the wall look like from Mexico, not just to ordinary Mexicans, but to those whose homes literally touch the wall?
In the fall of 2015, Germany designated Sumte, population 102, as a sanctuary for nearly 800 refugees. What followed was a living experiment in the country's principles.