Russia’s leaders are happy about Brexit, but it won’t help the regime much at home; What to read this summer about the Middle East; No, Brexit is not the end of the liberal world order; Post-Brexit, the U.K. is in its worst political crisis since 1940.; Here are the E.U.’s four options for negotiating Brexit; What will the peace process mean for Colombia’s border regions? The government will have to start governing.;
 
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The Supreme Court, not just three female justices, spoke loudly on women’s reproductive rights
What shapes a justice's view on abortion? It's not just gender.
Russia’s leaders are happy about Brexit, but it won’t help the regime much at home
The Kremlin has successfully made Russians accept life under sanctions, so it will be hard to make them see the value in Britain's vote to leave the E.U.
 
What to read this summer about the Middle East
Not your average beach books – engaging and important reads for everyone interested in the region.
 
No, Brexit is not the end of the liberal world order
It would be foolish to see the history of international relations as a slow but steady path towards ever more integration.
 
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Post-Brexit, the U.K. is in its worst political crisis since 1940.
Conservatives and Labour alike are in disarray. The UK and the EU could unravel. And political scientists must rethink their theories about European integration.
 
Here are the E.U.’s four options for negotiating Brexit
The E.U. has some decisions to make.
 
What will the peace process mean for Colombia’s border regions? The government will have to start governing.
The “how” and the “when” of Colombia’s latest peace breakthrough are important -- but so is the “where” and “with whom.”
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