by News Decoder | 22 Dec 2016 | Donald Trump, Islam, Middle East, Refugees, United States
By Alistair Lyon U.S. President-elect Donald Trump has casually hurled a diplomatic grenade into the Middle East. He has picked as his ambassador to Israel a fervent sponsor of Israeli settlements on occupied Palestinian land and an enemy of any two-state solution to...
by News Decoder | 21 Dec 2016 | Climate change, Donald Trump, Environment, School Year Abroad, Student Posts, United States
This article was a runner-up in the high school category of News-Decoder’s second essay/reporting contest. By Kate Curry While the United States ponders the domestic implications of Donald Trump’s election victory, the rest of the world is anxious about...
by Michaela Cohen | 20 Dec 2016 | Americas, Donald Trump, Europe, Globalization, Greens Farms Academy, Student Posts, United States
With the election of Donald Trump and Brexit, the world is at a crossroads. We can close our ears to the pleas of the disaffected, or start to listen. Donald Trump welcomes Nigel Farage, left, ex-leader of the British UKIP party, at a campaign rally in Jackson, Miss.,...
by News Decoder | 19 Dec 2016 | Donald Trump, Student Posts, United States
This article won first prize in the high school category of News-Decoder’s recent essay/reporting contest. By Nicholas Jain Evelyn Momplaisir’s eight-year-old son was crying in her arms. Earlier that day, two classmates in his Northern Virginia school said...
by News Decoder | 16 Dec 2016 | Europe, Student Posts
This story won first prize in the university category in News-Decoder’s second essay/reporting contest. By Alina Kaur A cold Siberian October. The last leaves are falling from the trees in a soothing silence. Then you hear someone running through the grass,...
by Rashad Mammadov | 8 Dec 2016 | Americas, Donald Trump, Future of Democracy, Indiana University, United States
By Rashad Mammadov Two years ago, a pair of American political scientists published a study that found that the U.S. system of government is closer to oligarchy — or rule by the few — than to democracy. Martin Gilens of Princeton University and Benjamin...
by Sue Landau | 6 Dec 2016 | Climate change, Donald Trump, United States
By Sue Landau Just when the world had taken a huge step forward in the life-or-death fight against global warming, a man who has denied climate change was elected U.S. president. Donald Trump’s victory cast a pall over the recent United Nations Climate...
by John Mehaffey | 1 Dec 2016 | Asia, Europe, Sport
While racial and religious tensions have risen in Britain after the Brexit vote, Muslim players are quietly breaking down barriers in English cricket. Moeen Ali of England bowls against India in Perth, Australia, 30 January 2015 (EPA/Richard Wainwright) In many ways...
by Malcolm Davidson | 1 Dec 2016 | Americas, Eyewitness
(All photos by Malcolm Davidson) News-Decoder correspondent Malcolm Davidson filed this report from Comandancia la Plata, Fidel Castro’s revolutionary headquarters in the Sierra Maestra mountains. By Malcolm Davidson A small bunch of pink and white flowers lie...
by News Decoder | 30 Nov 2016 | Americas, Eyewitness
By François Raitberger I had my first glimpse of Fidel Castro on my very first day in Cuba, and I was fascinated and ridiculed. As the Reuters correspondent I was invited to a reception for an African president in the lush gardens of a state villa in Havana. There I...