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Yiannis Baboulias is a journalist, a Resonant Voices fellow with the Balkan Investigative Reporting Network and a member of the investigative group The Manifold. His work on politics, economics and Europe, appears in the Atlantic, New Statesman, Foreign Policy and others.
Existing schemes are working because people choose to join them.
The corruption scandal engulfing Austria's deputy chancellor Heinz-Christian Strache is part of a broader trend among the far right.
How did these two high-concept movies become so totemic of early 21st-century culture?
The nation’s population has fallen, its youth joblessness is the worst in the EU, and its GDP is still a quarter below the 2007 level.
The EU and Greek government appear to have accepted that things will not improve for Europe's refugees.
The increasing desperation here will turn into a boon for smugglers.
Refugee camps are battling floods – and even arson. With each passing day, the chances of a fatal incident increase.
Since the failed coup in Turkey, there are on average 200 refugees a day arriving in Greece. But the world's media has gone home.
Splinter group Popular Unity’s stated aim is to take Greece out of the deal Syriza struck with its creditors.
Can new finance minister Yanis Varoufakis, political economist and game theory academic, negotiate solutions to inequality?