The Spanish judge who dared to hold brutal human rights violators to account is now fighting for his legal career.
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Spanish judge Baltasar Garzón has revolutionized international law--and now faces a suspension that could end his career.
A long-lost memoir of the Spanish Civil War moves jaggedly between boredom, fleeting triumphs and terror.
From Mirrors: Stories of Almost Everyone, tales of the Devil and wise women, torturers and the tortured.
Readers of Fidel Castro's My Life will find explanations of the Cuban Revolution, but no apologies for its suppression of dissent.
A "green" Hummer, bad karma from Firestone tires at the Super Bowl, MIA at the Oscars, remembering Milton Wolff.
You may recall the to-do occasioned two winters past by a certain shift in the mise-en-scène at the United Nations.
When she was 30, Mónica M. fled her violent husband, taking her two small children and only the clothes on her back. But leaving did not solve her problems.
ETA is losing legitimacy, but many Basques still feel unable to condemn it.
Pat Buchanan, the man who urged Ronald Reagan to visit the Nazi cemetery at Bitburg, is no stranger to charges of anti-Semitism.


