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Why journalism that refuses to simplify, refuses to look away from messy, contradictory realities remains essential to ...
When I lived in Bishkek 25 years ago, then-president Askar Akayev was so effusive in expressing his desire for Kyrgyzstan to ...
With the US operation in Iran triggering fresh arms races, Russia’s turn from multipolarity to imperial nostalgia highlights ...
Years of sanctions have substantially weakened the Iranian economy, as evidenced by Iran’s keenness to have them cancelled, ...
A laboratory for journalism The word “zeg” means “the day after tomorrow” in Georgian. And that encapsulates Coda’s mission to look beyond the headlines, connect the dots between crises, identify ...
It was 2014, and I was standing in the ruins of Donetsk airport, when a Russian-backed rebel commander launched into what seemed like an oddly academic lecture. Between bursts of artillery fire, he ...
Headlines around the world have described Pavel Durov as Russia’s Mark Zuckerberg or Elon Musk but also the Robin Hood of the internet. These descriptions struggle to tell us anything of note because ...
This story is part of our Complicating Colonialism series, which explores how unfinished conversations about the past play out in our daily lives and shape our collective future. Read more from this ...
Former Soviet Republics have a lot in common with countries that have struggled against Western colonialism. So why don't we tend to see Russia as a colonizer?
A ban on protests is raising deep questions about who is considered part of the nation and what, exactly, Germany has learned from its history.
In small-town Kazakhstan, an experiment with the “smart city” model has some residents smiling. But it also signals the start of a new mass surveillance era for the Central Asian nation.