Human rights agenda seen to be 'losing ground' around the world
The Human Rights Council began with warnings of broken norms despite some powerful movements for social justice.
The Human Rights Council began with warnings of broken norms despite some powerful movements for social justice.
The global scandal has threatened generations of children, the Catholic Church's credibility and the pope's leadership.
Leaders criticized the breakdown in transatlantic relations from U.S. isolationism despite China's growing power.
The extremist group is reported to still have thousands of foreign terrorist fighters among its ranks in Iraq and Syria.
Data worth an estimated $10 trillion — equal to twice Japan's GDP — moves through underwater cables every day.
The four-member U.N. team went to Ankara and Istanbul and their report to the U.N. Human Rights Council is due in June.
The biggest beneficiaries are likely to be the E.U., Mexico, Japan, Canada, South Korea, India, Australia and Brazil.
The global trade federation IFPMA joined a chorus of voices saying health spending is a critical investment, not just a cost.
The U.S. will suspend participation in the Intermediate Range Nuclear Forces Treaty against nuclear-capable cruise missiles.
The strategy is part of a draft report from the World Health Organization's chief on health, environment and climate.
U.N. special rapporteur Agnès Callamard requested and authorized the probe and her team now plans to visit Turkey.
WTO's stalled negotiations re-emerged on the last day of the World Economic Forum's annual meeting in Davos.
Among the proposals for reining in big tech are the creation of a new system for data oversight and a common digital market.
Germany's chancellor noted some 'disquiet in the international system,' referencing the Trump administration.
Dire environmental challenges and climate change took center stage at the World Economic Forum's annual gathering.
That updated forecast is down from the 3.7% growth rate from last year that had been expected to continue in 2019.