Le mercredi 19 novembre, Sisse Marie Welling, candidate du Parti populaire socialiste, devient la maire de Copenhague. Les sociaux-démocrates, un parti de centre gauche au gouvernement au niveau fédéral, finissent en troisième position, avec 12,7% du vote. Ceci note la … Continue reading
Tag: Democracy
The Case of Sudan: What UAE’s Actions Mean for Contemporary Interventionism
On March 5, 2025, the Sudanese government accused the United Arab Emirates (UAE) before the International Court of Justice (IJC) of complicity in genocide in its relations to the Rapid Support Forces (RSF), a paramilitary group that has allegedly committed … Continue reading
All Falls Down: How America’s Two Party System Has Failed Americans
Over the past year, American politics have become polarized to a degree rarely seen before. What is the main cause behind this polarization, and how can it be fixed?
On September 19, 1796, George Washington published his farewell address to … Continue reading
Looking Back: Syria One Year Post-Assad
Imagine having a 15 to 1 advantage, and you still lose.
That’s how some people described what happened to Bashar Al-Assad’s Syrian regime when it was rapidly overrun by rebel factions in December 2024. While those exact odds are an … Continue reading
What the Videos of the El-Fasher City Massacre Tell Us About the War in Sudan
Recently, videos circulated online depicting the massacres in Sudan by the RSF, which a Yale institute analysis of drone footage has corroborated. One video depicts RSF soldiers taunting captured men and boys before summarily executing them, a manner reminiscent of … Continue reading
Gustavo Petro: Militant, guérillero, président de la République colombienne
En 2022, Gustavo Petro est devenu le premier président de gauche de la Colombie. Remportant 700 000 voix de plus que son opposant, la victoire de Petro a constitué un moment historique en Colombie.
L’enfance de Petro
Petro est né … Continue reading
Democracy in Action: What We Can Learn from Brazil’s Bolsonaro Trial
Amidst a changing tariff landscape and turbulent global conflicts, Brazil’s recent acts of judicial accountability sharply contrast the global trend of increased democratic backsliding. In spite of domestic divisions and retaliation from the Trump administration, Brazil is succeeding where a … Continue reading
One Year: Georgia’s Shift Away from the West
October 26, 2025, marks the first anniversary of the start of Georgia’s latest constitutional crisis. Beginning with an irregular election that saw the ruling Georgian Dream party win by a landslide, allegedly garnering 54.8 percent of the vote, many believe … Continue reading
Freedom for Some: Increasing Media, Press, and Academic Censorship under the Trump Administration
A defining feature of Donald Trump’s approach to governance is the suppression of dissent and the intimidation of opponents, whether directly through his administration, indirectly through institutional pressure, or by inciting hostility among his supporters.
Since returning to power … Continue reading
He Walks the Blocks He Represents: Mamdani’s Campaign of Connection
As political disillusionment deepens and establishment figures cling to power, a new kind of candidate is capturing the public’s attention. In New York City, Zohran Mamdani is running a unique mayoral campaign that challenges traditional power structures and reimagines who … Continue reading