ASEAN’s Double Vision of Migration Although ASEAN’s new consensus document on migration is a giant step towards safeguarding the rights of migrant workers, it still sticks to putting skilled professionals and lower-skilled migrants in separate silos. By Johanna Son
The Nightmare of the Czech Presidential Elections Commentary Thirty years after the Velvet Revolution, the atmosphere in Czech society is poisonous. Many who followed the course of the Czech presidential elections during the past few weeks in detail must feel they are trapped in a nightmare. By Eva van de Rakt
Governing the Big Bad Fix? What to do about geoengineering Geoengineering – large-scale manipulation of the Earth’s natural systems – is increasingly being presented as a strategy to counteract, dilute or delay climate change. Which international legal norms and agreements would contradict the different measures? By Duncan Currie
The digital energy revolution? Charge it with values! The transition to renewable energy will also require automatically coordinating generation and consumption. On the challenges of the digitized power system. By Dr. Stefanie Groll
Katowice: A European coal capital goes green Nowhere in the EU is smog more suffocating than in southern Poland. This year, the polluted Polish mining city Katowice will host the COP24 climate conference. Ahead of that, change is in the air — and on the ground. By Richard Fuchs
Kennan Cable No. 29: U.S. Sanctions Law and Western Coordination on Russia Policy Article In July 2017, the U.S. Congress overwhelmingly passed additional sanctions against Russia, Iran, and North Korea. What was the response from Russia and Germany? How are U.S. lawmakers addressing European concerns? By Dominik Tolksdorf
The Meaty Side of Climate Change While energy giants like Exxon and Shell have drawn fire for their roles in warming the planet, the corporate meat and dairy industries have largely avoided scrutiny. By Shefali Sharma
Hungary 2017: Detained refugees, persecuted NGOs, lack of legal certainty Hungary has reached a point where people fleeing from war and persecution can be detained, beaten and deprived of their rights, while those who endeavour to help them are cast as national security risks. By Nóra Köves
The Heinrich Böll Foundation mourns the death of Memorial co-founder Arseny Roginsky Obituary With the death of Arseny Roginsky, the Heinrich Böll Foundation loses one of its closest and oldest friends and partners in Russia. By Walter Kaufmann
"What has happened in Zimbabwe is a political fraud" Interview The power shift in Zimbabwe was a military coup, says Brain Raftopoulos. To prevent the consolidation of a new authoritarian state, the international community has to be careful not to prioritise stability over democratisation. By Claudia Simons and Brian Raftopoulos