Virat Kohli of India celebrates after the final run is scored during the ICC Men’s T20 World Cup match between India and Pakistan in October 2022.
Darrian Traynor/ICC via Getty Images
It is often said that Transnistria will be “the next domino” that Moscow will try to knock down, after Crimea and Donbass. However, the famous domino theory has its limits.
Burundian military officers arrive in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to tackle the rise of militias in the region.
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Maxim Samson speaks to The Conversation Weekly podcast about the hidden lines that explain variations in everything from access to education to animal species
Chinese president, Xi Jinping, claps during the closing meeting of the Two Sessions annual parliamentary meetings.
Wu Hao / EPA
Messi will not start a war in China, but this is not to say that football lacks political relevance.
Border conflicts, spanning different time periods and places, are behind many of the big international disputes today.
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At the United Nations and elsewhere, the response by the US and Western Europe to events in Israel and Gaza have been out of step with that of governments in Africa, South America and Asia.
Fan Yang, The University of Melbourne and Ausma Bernot, Charles Sturt University
How can the world regulate AI? Europe’s comprehensive approach, China’s tightly targeted laws, and America’s dramatic executive order hint at three ways forward.
Simon Evenett, University of St.Gallen and Niccolò Pisani, International Institute for Management Development (IMD)
Research aims to provide a better idea about why some multinationals are ‘trapped’ in Russia following its invasion of Ukraine.
Leaders of African American, Latino and Native American communities protest the name of the Washington Redskins, November, 2013.
Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post via Getty Images
The book makes invaluable contributions to subjects of race, identity and belonging and how they shape human interrelations.
Indonesian President Joko Widodo, left, presents Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi a tree sapling during the G20 summit in New Delhi.
Dan Kitwood/Getty Images
The G20 has its critics, but an expert on international politics explains why it still performs a useful function – particularly in this period of great geopolitical divisions.