Could Business leaders’ political involvement threaten democracy? And could similar dynamics emerge in Europe?
ICE knows that it cannot shoot us all. But the Department of Homeland Security is close to being able to track us all.
A new briefing paper produced by the London Social Media Observatory (LSMO) at Royal Holloway and Westminster Foundation for ...
Artificial intelligence (AI) is changing our lives faster than most societies can adapt. It brings real promise — better ...
In the medical world, surgery is often viewed as the definitive moment of healing. Yet, any surgeon will tell you that the ...
Sen. Bernie Sanders’s (I-VT) recent call for a nationwide moratorium on data center construction may be framed as a pause for democracy’s sake, but in practice it would lead to very different ...
As Michigan prepares for what’s sure to be a contentious midterm election cycle, experts are warning that skepticism of election results becoming a bipartisan interest could have damaging consequences ...
The demand from the federal government to Minnesota leaders hasn’t relented for months: Hand over sensitive welfare data. Starting this summer, the Department of Justice began pressing state officials ...
Congress president and Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, Mallikarjun Kharge, on Wednesday launched a blistering attack on the Modi government and the RSS, alleging that parliamentary ...
The Australian Greens have reintroduced a Bill to ban political donations from dirty industries driving the cost-of-living and climate crises, including fossil fuel companies, gambling giants and the ...
This is the fifth and final story in the “Crossing the Line” series about efforts in the Deep South to redraw voting ...
Democracy in America is rarely destroyed in one dramatic stroke. It is weakened quietly—through procedural changes, administrative barriers, data grabs, and the slow normalization of exclusion.