Nigeria has accepted a U.S. intelligence offer after more than 200 girls were abducted by Nigerian Islamist group Boko Haram.
Google’s predictive search bar still blocks the word “bisexual” and LGBT advocates are fed up.
Major U.S. and European firms are under investigation for possible bribery violations, The Wall Street Journal reports.
The Nigerian insurgency may be spilling over into neighboring countries.
The huge bank is said to be trying avoid compliance costs.
As a key high-level economic forum in Russia draws closer, American companies are weighing their stakes in the country. Here's a list of what they're dealing with.
The decision is the biggest victory yet for the 'fossil free' student movement.
Georgia's ex-Premier Bidzina Ivanishvili has a lucrative relationship with Vladimir Putin, who will pay big money for political aims.
Employment discrimination and a demographic shift many Uighurs feel is diluting their culture is fueling resentment that has led to attacks against Han Chinese.
Jack Ma is no longer Alibaba's CEO, but the company founder is a cultural icon
More kidnappings linked to Boko Haram as the U.S. offers help recovering at least 250 captives.
"I think this is something we will have to consider," a top general says.
A sudden "situation" at the Executive Mansion.
Canada grapples with reforming its foreign worker policy as the number of foreign temps is set to exceed permanent immigrants by 2015.
"Climate change, once considered an issue for a distant future, has moved firmly into the present."
"The fact is we have to do more to retain and attract world-class talent to the United States," Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker said.
Investigators believe Lacey Spears may have poisoned her 5-year-old son with sodium.
After a string of attacks in China's train stations, citizens fear that not enough preventive security measures have been taken.
The woman, who claims she was sexually abused, allegedly bludgeoned her father to death and tore out his pacemaker to make sure he was dead.
Singapore aims to limit tax evasion by U.S. citizens, just when the country is becoming a major wealth-management hub.
After Boko Haram announced it will sell 200 kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirls on the market, we looked at where exactly those markets were.
The British child who disappeared seven years ago is one of the world's most recognized missing person.
A group of dissidents have reportedly been arrested in China before the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests on June 4.
Violence has escalated in Ukraine's eastern region as presidential elections and an impending referendum approaches.
South Korean prosecutors say the employees overloaded the Sewol with cargo, and they believe it was one of the reasons the ferry sank.
Oleksandr Turchynov, Ukraine’s acting president, dismissed the head of Odessa's regional administration on Tuesday after the fatal riot.
One suspect was shot and a second suspect was caught after a brief chase.
Brazil might have to add public safety to its long "to do" list before the soccer tournament's June 12 kickoff.
A general cites a "drastic" rise in military flights near U.S. territories, Korea and Japan.
The radical Islamist group in Nigeria vows to sell 276 young girls into slavery.