At last, we can read what we have been missing – a literature as unpredictable as Georgian politics.
Since 1991, Georgia has celebrated Independence Day annually on 26 May. But this national holiday only exposes the gap between elites and the people.
An economic and strategic partnership between Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Turkey is ramping up, and turning to the West.
The disintegration of the Soviet Union has given birth to a new and difficult reality in Georgia.
Georgia’s signing of the Association Agreement with the EU has been welcomed by the country’s people and its elite, but it will likely not be the panacea they hope.
The Republic of Georgia is an avowedly Christian country, but one out of every ten Georgian citizens is Muslim.
Tangerines, an Estonian film about the Abkhaz-Georgian conflict, is up for an Oscar in the category of Best Foreign Language Film. What was it that caught the eye of the Academy?
Georgian Prime Minister Irakli Gharibashvili's decision on 4 November 2014 to dismiss Defence Minister Irakli Alasania provoked an immediate reaction both in and outside the country.
Kakha Bendukidze died in November 2014 at the age of 58. Bendukidze directed the whirlwind of economic reform that characterised Georgia from 2004 to 2008-2009.
Academic concepts about EU foreign policy and the European Neighbourhood Policy are not always enough to explain what is going on in the region.
Crime has been near the top of Georgia's political agenda for a decade. But successive governments have still to address fundamental questions of legitimacy and trust.
Georgians see the struggle for Ukrainian sovereignty as an analogue of their own fate.