After a recent trip to Bosnia, where Muslim men and women pray in the same shared space, Ceasefire columnist Ruqaya Izzidien asks why things can't be the same in the UK.
In an exclusive and wide-ranging interview, David Ruccio, one the world's leading "non-orthodox" economists, speaks to Ceasefire contributor Chris Hesketh about globalisation, the financial crisis, the death of the university, the problem with Chavez and more.
In this week's South of the Border column, Ceasefire correspondent Tom Kavanagh reviews Héctor Abad's 'Oblivion: A memoir', a tragic account of struggle and loss in Latin America.
In his latest 'In Theory' column, political theorist Andy Robinson introduces a new entry in his "A to Z of theory". This week: the second and final part on the French theorist Louis Althusser.
In this week's North African Dispatches, Kateb Salim looks at the awe-inspiring Libyan uprising and the crumbling, disappearing reign of Colonel Gaddafi.
Following hotly disputed election results and growing civil unrest, Nakama Popoh reports on the historical legacy and international powers influencing political elites in Côte d’Ivoire today.
An emergency meeting was called by sabatical officers at the London School of Economics this morning following the apparent complicity of former alumnus saif al islam gaddafi in war crimes against his own people. An occupation has now been declared. Omayr Ghani, Ceasefire's Political Editor, reports.
In a new edition of her "Letters from Brussels", Ceasefire correspondent Emily Macintosh reports on a powerful art exhibition that got her thinking about the problems surrounding social housing provision in Brussels and Glasgow.
Is there a relationship between capitalism and healthcare? If so, what is it? In his monthly essay investigating corporate power, Ceasefire columnist Michael Barker looks at how corporations shape our public healthcare systems, with disastrous results.