Iceland’s quest for equality, openness and democracy
As cracks appear in political establishments the world over, Iceland is forging its own path towards an open and inclusive society.
As cracks appear in political establishments the world over, Iceland is forging its own path towards an open and inclusive society.
The government has announced an economic package to deal with the country’s acutely low wages or, more likely, to profit multinationals and keep Orbán in power.
While the country is at a tipping point, here is a rundown of the most important facts on the recent political developments in France.
After the back and forth with Brussels, a positive credit rating helped Portugal overcome its state of budgetary limbo, yet Lisbon was “verbally downgraded” by German Finance Minister Wolfgang Schäuble.
A decade after it was founded, the Pirate Party are set to make yet another historic step, this time in Iceland, where it has has mobilized a great level of public support and has been leading the polls ever since the announcement of the national election.
Germany’s biggest bank hits the headlines after being asked to pay a €14 billion fine to the US Department of Justice. The markets are said to be nervous.
This Sunday (2 October), Hungary will hold a referendum on whether to accept the European Union’s mandatory quota system for the resettlement of refugees. The result will put the EU’s values to the test.
It will be intriguing to see whether, in the coming years, Alexander Lukashenko will be able to produce an antidote to Putin’s control or agree to maintain the role of a puppet.
Life with a lot of variety has a rotten core. Wanting everything is losing sight of what really matters while feeding a machine.
How the law surrounding the “reprivatization” of properties in Warsaw is being exploited.