Feature
List of Feature articles
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Zguladze-Glucksmann_BW (1) Eka Zguladze-Glucksmann
For Instilling the Maidan's Spirit in Ukraine's Police Force
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LGBT_advocatescrop LGBT Power Surge
Why Russia, Uganda, and other repressive states are fighting a losing battle against sexual freedom.
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Euro_decisionmakerscrop Does Europe Even Matter?
Dysfunction has sucked Brussels dry of any foreign-policy power or relevance.
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decisionmakerscrop The Iran Deal Wasn’t Revolutionary
The nuclear accord may have been historic, but it didn’t turn the tide of acrimonious relations between Washington and Tehran.
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FP_GT2015_twitterwall1111crop Foreign Policy’s 100 Leading Global Thinkers of 2015
The artists, innovators, and moguls who changed the world this year.
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gettyimages-458960018crop The Anglo Invasion of Italy
Matteo Renzi passed the “Jobs Act” and mothers are taking their bambini to “baby parking.” But Italians are finally saying basta to the world’s lingua franca.
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342-fh-3a14796 Cranberries in the Amazon, Pie in Almaty, Turkey in Chengdu
Friends of FP share their tales of Thanksgivings spent far from home.
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GettyImages-460770794 You Have the Right to Remain Silent
Inside the fight over the American Bar Association's tepid condemnation of Beijing’s crackdown on lawyers and activists.
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An Iranian woman walks past graffiti in a southwestern street of Tehran on June 29, 2015. Despite agreeing the outlines of a nuclear agreement on April 2, the final talks between Iran and six powers led by the United States on turning it into a binding accord have hit difficulties on reaching a deal which would lift sanctions, paving the way for foreign investment to flow back, in exchange for curbs on Iran's nuclear activities. AFP PHOTO/BEHROUZ MEHRI (Photo credit should read BEHROUZ MEHRI/AFP/Getty Images) Dear Iran, Can I Please Come Home?
Relations between Tehran and Washington are better than ever, but for Iranian-Americans things have never been worse.
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illo_hackers_shell Anonymous vs. the Islamic State
For nearly a year, a war has been unfolding in strange corners of the Internet. But can a bunch of hackers really take on the world’s deadliest jihadi group?