In its ancient birthplace, wine faces a climate change-imperiled future
As worsening extreme weather ruins harvests, some winemakers are switching to growing nuts - and the government is firing anti-hail rockets
OPINION: Underinvested, overexposed: Facebook Papers confirm our worst fears
Governments around the world must adopt data protection laws that actually limit Facebook’s business model
EXCLUSIVE-EU suspends funding to WHO programmes in Congo after sex scandal
European commission decided to withdraw more than 20.7 million euros of funding for WHO projects in Congo after sexual abuse scandal
More victims complain of sexual abuse in Congo scandal - WHO expert
Some 83 aid workers, a quarter employed by the WHO, were involved in sexual coercion and abuse during DRC's 10th Ebola epidemic
Why are power outages paralyzing Lebanon?
Lebanon's power outages are leading to water shortages, rotten food, and an imminent "humanitarian catastrophe." How did it get so bad?
U.S. judge blocks enforcement of near-total abortion ban in Texas
The case is part of a fierce legal battle over abortion access in the United States, with numerous states pursuing restrictions
Texas law sparks hundreds of U.S. protests against abortion restrictions
Hundreds of marches take place across the United States on Saturday to demand women's right to choose
British policeman jailed for life for murder and rape of Sarah Everard
The murder prompted outpourings of anger from women who have recounted their own experiences and fears of being out alone at night
Women across Latin America march in favor of abortion rights
Every year, thousands of women in Latin America die from unsafe abortions at a time when teenage pregnancies and sexual violence continue to increase in the region
Colombian unions march in support of aid bills for working class and poor
The reform is meant to benefit millions through emergency basic income payments, temporarily free tuition, and salary subsidies for businesses which hire women and youth