
A note from the editor’s desk
“Seems like Putin has gone for it.” The words appeared blurry on my screen—but rubbing my eyes and putting my glasses on didn’t make them less surreal…
“Seems like Putin has gone for it.” The words appeared blurry on my screen—but rubbing my eyes and putting my glasses on didn’t make them less surreal…
Anton Polyakov documents daily life in Transnistria, from the remnants of the Soviet Union kept firmly in place to Russian folk sport and Transnistrian traditions.
“That’s crazy,” I say while holding a sign reading “Stop Putin’s War” outside the Russian Consulate in Naples. “I’ve lived outside of Russia for years
“Dear Peter. I have been waiting to write to you for a long time, but the latest news has made it clear that it is
While the invasion of Ukraine has stunned the world with its scale and violence, it is neither an isolated phenomenon nor coming out of nowhere.
“Look! There are cargo ships bringing coal to the plant again!” says Luciano Damiani, gesturing towards two vessels silhouetted on the horizon between the sea
“I am very capable, I am just a little tired” Mykhaylo is not yet 60. Under martial law, he is eligible to serve in Ukraine’s
A free thinker’s take on Europe, disinformation, activism, and the future of journalism
The plight of Crimea returned to global attention after a rally in Moscow to mark the eighth anniversary of its annexation by Russia. On 18
This timeline was made during the editorial process of our latest magazine, Beyond the headlines of war.
Since Russia invaded Ukraine, conversations with family and friends in Lithuania inevitably touch on one of the following: stomach cramps, insomnia, or flashbacks to seeing tanks in 1991.
War blurs professional boundaries; it is all about survival. Yet, many Ukrainian artists stay true to their identities and pick up brushes in the face of the Russian invasion.