At Italy’s dark heart: the weak rule of law
Giorgia Meloni’s government is squandering a golden opportunity to reverse Italy’s economic decline.
Giorgia Meloni’s government is squandering a golden opportunity to reverse Italy’s economic decline.
After the elections in eastern-German Länder and ahead of those in Austria, Robert Misik casts an unsentimental eye on far-right voters.
We are running out of time on the climate crisis—yet ‘slow living’ is a key to its solution.
In today’s runaway world, Einstein’s ideal of ‘abolishing war’ becomes unavoidable rather than impractical.
To sustain healthy and safe conditions at work, unprecedented action is urgently needed.
Europe’s housing crisis can be solved. But a range of policy tools is needed to do so.
The results in Saxony and Thuringia show the party does not have to moderate its positions to have electoral success.
NGOs have increasingly looked to the courts for action on climate change. Now the Court of Justice of the EU is the focus.
The new government’s goals are modest. But economic reality may force it to follow changing public opinion.
Financial integration is not the problem, writes Peter Bofinger. It is the still national segmentation of government bonds.
Europe must not turn its eyes away from the huge death toll of journalists in Gaza.
The concentration of wealth is a global issue and it is getting worse.
The Belgian presidency of the Council of the EU has set the social-policy ambition for the next European Commission to follow.
For the first time, in the first half of this year wind and solar generated more electricity in the European Union.
The European Union can be the biggest winner from the United Nations tax convention.
UK bosses are increasingly forcing workers back into the office—but evidence suggests it could backfire.
Ignoring the law and the cost of these risky experiments would set the new European Commission on a dangerous path.