What’s Eating Europe’s Food System? Published: 22 May 2025 Commentary The farmers' protests in many European countries in early 2024 revealed the frustration of many farmers. Food prices are a key issue here since producers rarely benefit from the rise in consumer prices. Politicians are urged to create fair framework conditions. By Elmar Hannen and Martin Häusling
Declaration on the Occasion of the 69th Commission on the Status of Women Published: 20 May 2025 Declaration Eleven outstanding feminists from around the world, who where selected as 2025 Feminist Foreign and Development Policy Fellows, participated in the 69th Commission on the Status of Women at the UN Headquarters. Here they share their main considerations. By Ruken Adin, Natasha Boshkova, Chim Channeang, Agustina Correa, Alinafe Irene Nonhlanhla Gama, Ouafa Haddiou, Lakshita Kanhiya, Gunel Madadli, Soumya Mishra, Sara Méndez Niebles and Olha Yashchenko
What Strategies Are Needed to Counter Authoritarian Tendencies in Serbia? Published: 30 April 2025 Interview "The only approach we haven't tried is a transitional government tasked with establishing proper electoral conditions, which is why we're proposing it now." – Radomir Lazović and Biljana Đorđević on engagement, resistance, and the future of the Green Left in Serbia.
Financing the fight: Why redistribution, not charity, matters for feminism Published: 29 April 2025 Commentary At CSW69, calls to fund feminist futures grew stronger amid economic injustice, fragmented advocacy, and a political declaration dodging anti-rights backlash - echoed not in plenary halls, but in sidelines, courtrooms, and coalitions demanding more. By Lakshita Kanhiya
Rare Earths: Why European Industries Are Dependent on Myanmar Published: 29 April 2025 Commentary Almost two-thirds of the heavy rare earths dysprosium and terbium on the global market come from Myanmar. How should Germany and Europe deal with the mining of urgently needed rare earths in the civil war-torn country of Myanmar? By Johanna Sydow
Fractured Authority and Resource Politics in Myanmar: New Report on Rare Earth Mining Published: 22 April 2025 Study The mining of rare earths is not just about international raw materials policy, as a new study from Myanmar shows. It is also about environmental justice, local governance and the future of the civil war-torn country. By Shanan Foundation
How Anti-LGBTQ+ Ideas Help the Georgian Dream Consolidate Power Published: 17 April 2025 Analysis Anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric has been a central element of the Georgian Dream’s anti-democratic turn towards the far right. How do anti-LGBTQ+ statements and policies help GD expand its grip on power, and why does this strategy work? By Tamta Gelashvili
Externalisation of migration & asylum Published: 4 April 2025 Dossier The externalisation of migration and asylum management raises numerous ethical, legal and operational questions. With the goal to promote human security, this in-progress dossier looks into the intersection between human rights and foreign & security policy and its expression in terms of migration policies globally.
"Go to Clinton!" A Kosovar historian reconstructs the massacres of the Kosovo War Published: 3 April 2025 Comment Michael Martens reviews Shkëlzen Gashi's book on 83 massacres during the Kosovo War, documenting crimes by Serbian forces and reprisals. The author's merit is to provide new information about the victims, the perpetrators and the search for justice.
How Brussels Risks Undermining Serbia’s Democratization Potential Published: 2 April 2025 Commentary While Brussels may see the Jadar lithium mining project as a strategic step toward a greener future, Serbia’s President Aleksandar Vučić sees it as a tactical tool to reinforce his grip on power - just as hundreds of thousands rise to reclaim democracy. By Bojan Elek