One year on, family of murdered Amazon land defender say nothing has changed
One year after one of their leaders was killed, Brazil's "Guardians of the Forest" are still battling illegal logging
British homeowners face bankruptcy to strip unsafe building panels
Up to 1.5 million flats across the country are unsellable because they cannot demonstrate the safety of their cladding
Nearly one billion people scared of losing homes or land, poll finds
Housing and land insecurity make it harder for people to plan for the future, hampering economic growth
From inmate to homeless: Poor housing returns convicts to jail in England
Prisoners released from jail into unstable accommodation are significantly more likely to re-offend, research finds
Who owns your data? It's complicated
As authorities roll out surveillance tools to track the coronavirus, the Thomson Reuters Foundation spoke to digital rights expert Martin Tisne about who owns our data, what it's worth and how we can protect it
INTERVIEW-Don't forget the homeless once coronavirus crisis ends, U.N. expert urges
Efforts to help the homeless risk losing steam as countries lift COVID-19 measures and focus on averting a recession
Race for space to house vulnerable in coronavirus crisis
From motels to railway stations, buildings are being rapidly repurposed to house the homeless during the coronavirus lockdown
Trees alone can't win fight against soaring heat, cities warned
Popular projects to plant more trees in cities may not protect residents from soaring and often deadly heat, say researchers
Art and technology expose 'hidden inequalities' in cities
Drone images highlighting stark housing differences can help cities combat entrenched inequalities, says artist
In vanishing portraits, artist urges world leaders to protect indigenous tribes
An artist is using vanishing portraits of endangered tribes to spur world leaders into action at the World Economic Forum in Davos