In striving for a “business-friendly environment”, the Georgian government is further eroding labour rights. Workers have taken to the streets in response.
On Saakashvili’s watch, Georgia’s UNM has finally split. What does that mean for the country’s opposition?
Georgia’s draconian laws against narcotics are in the spotlight, as activists take to the streets and demand an end to the criminalisation of drug users.
Georgia's approach to homelessness is beset by myths and myopia. If the authorities are serious about tackling social exclusion, they have to move on from the carrot and the stick.
A massive new construction project overlooking Georgia’s capital reveals the true extent of an oligarch’s grip on politics — and Tbilisi’s struggle to become a city for all its people.
Amid widespread apathy and corruption, Georgia’s democracy faces all too familiar obstacles.
In the aftermath of parliamentary elections, can Georgia build a more stable political culture?
For years, Georgia’s politics has been organised around the “search for a saviour”. But now this search has quietly ended, what is left?
A quarter century since the collapse of Soviet rule in Armenia, Georgia, and Azerbaijan, where is the region now and what can come next? RU
Georgia’s church is independent of the state. How long before the state can free itself from the church?
In Georgia, whether you're in opposition or in power, you can always call your opponent an agent of the Kremlin.
In the shadow of conflicts past and present, Ossetians and Georgians have found ways to coexist. Twenty-five years after the collapse of the USSR, how do they fit into the post-Soviet story?