One hundred years after the First World War, boundaries established after the armistice at the "eleventh hour of the eleventh day of the eleventh hour" still shape many of today's conflicts. From ISIS's invasion of Mosul to Boko Haram's kidnapping of schoolgirls, GlobalPost co-founder Charles Sennott journeys from Iraq to Nigeria to the Balkans to Northern Ireland and the Holy Land to see how WWI's history lives on, the lessons learned — and far too often not learned.
Lawyer Jacques Verges passed away in Paris on Thursday. He was known as the devil's advocate for defending criminals like Klaus Barbie and Carlos the Jackal.
Majlinda Kelmendi will be competing in the Olympics in London this year. She's the first Kosovar to participate since the country declared independence back in 2008. But because Kosovo isn't recognized by the United Nations, she must compete for Albania.
Kosovo's contested statehood has made the International Olympic Committee not allow Majlinda Kelmendi to represent her country at London 2012.
Gbagbo appeared in the court at The Hague on Monday to face charges of crimes against humanity.
The European Union requires candidates for membership to have peaceful relations with their neighbors. Twelve years after the Kosovo War, the governments of Kosovo and Serbia are trying to normalize relations.
The Geo Quiz is looking for a Serbian city hosting one of Europe's biggest music events.
Has the Serbian nationalism been replaced by pragmatism, or is it lying dormant?
Some Serbians who remember the NATO airstrikes on their country in 1999 are voicing their support for Libya and Muammr Gaddafi. Nate Tabak reports from Belgrade.
There are strong arguments for and against the intervention in Libya. Another urgent debate unfolding now that the operation is under way: Is this strictly a humanitarian intervention or is the ultimate goal regime change? The World's Jeb Sharp reports.