Chilcot inquiry: What is the long-awaited report into the Iraq war all about?
Report into UK's involvement in the Iraq war will be released on Wednesday 6 July.
NUT strike: Here is why teachers across England are staging a mass walkout of schools
Teachers across the country will take industrial action over pay and conditions on 5 July.
World Refugee Day: The Mediterranean migrant crisis by numbers
IBT UK looks at the unprecedented migrant crisis in the Mediterranean on World Refugee Day, marked on 20 June.
How Syrian and Yazidi women refugees are rebuilding their lives after escaping Isis
Displaced women are setting up businesses in Iraqi Kurdistan after escaping Islamic State
Yulin dog meat festival: Why thousands of dogs are slaughtered over the summer solstice in China
The festival sees tens of thousands of dogs killed for their meat
Orlando shooting: LGBT Muslims speak up – 'Owen Jones was right to walk out'
LGBT Muslims speak about the impact of the mass shooting of LGBT people at nightclub Pulse in Orlando.
Juno mission: Ten facts about the Nasa spacecraft speeding towards the gas giant Jupiter
Ten key facts about the Nasa Juno mission and spacecraft, due to arrive at planet Jupiter on 4 July 2016.
Poland: The hard-right Law and Justice Party is destroying the few LGBT rights that exist
As Warsaw's gay pride parade takes place, LGBT rights are under threat from Poland's right-wing politicians.
Pride in London: What you need to know about the annual LGBT festival and parade
Pride in London festival, one of the world's biggest LGBT celebrations is on from 10 to 26 June.
Stella Creasy MP: 'We need compulsory sex and relationships education to fight online abuse'
IBTimes UK interviews Labour MP for Walthamstow Stella Creasy on tackling abuse on social media.
Carers Week: 'You carry the weight of the people you care for on your shoulders'
IBTimes UK speaks to a young carer on Carers Week, marked from 6 to 12 June to raise awareness of the unpaid work.
Meet the 'flying hospital' fighting to save the broken hearts of Tanzania's poor children
IBTimes UK visits a medical team treating children with congenital heart defects in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania.
Five scientific reasons to lace up your trainers and go for a run
Your body will thank you for it.
Reclaim the Internet: Online misogyny rife as 'slut' and 'whore' tweeted 200,000 times in three weeks
A social media study by Demos has mapped out thousands of abusive tweets sent out from UK Twitter accounts.
Hay Festival 2016: Everything you need to know about the literature and arts festival
The Hay Festival of Literature & the Arts runs from Thursday 26 May to Sunday 5 June in Hay-on-Wye, Wales.
Women should be fronting the EU referendum debate - or a Brexit could undermine their rights
Former Labour deputy Harriet Harman has warned the EU referendum campaign has been dominated by men.
Meet the Sudanese refugee artist painting the migrant crisis in the Calais 'Jungle'
IBTimes UK speaks to a Sudanese refugee from South Kordofan who uses art to express his experience in Calais 'Jungle' camp.
Obstetric fistula: 'I had bled the whole night when the doctor saw me - the baby had died'
The International Day to End Obstetric Fistula, a childbirth injury, is marked on 23 May.
International Museum Day 2016: 15 must-visit museums around the world
The best museums of art, popular culture, war, history and architecture on the 18 May celebration of museums.
Dementia Awareness Week 2016: What is Alzheimer's disease and what causes it?
IBTimes UK examines Alzheimer's disease on Dementia Awareness Week.
'Fabulous rear' advert puts heat on Marco Pierre White's Birmingham restaurant in sexism row
MPW Group and Birmingham Hotel La Tour face criticism over "sexist and offensive" poster campaign.
How the Eurovision Song Contest became an unstoppable celebration of LGBT culture
It sends out a clear message of tolerance and acceptance.
#FawcettFlatsFriday: Women hit back against the sexist high-heel row with 'flat friday' Twitter storm
Women are tweeting pictures of their flat shoes with #FawcettFlatsFriday over the high heel row.
Being asexual: Sexual attraction is like a language I can't speak
IBTimes UK speaks to two asexual people about their lives, relationships and the lack of sexual attraction.
Oklahoma oral sex ruling creates a disturbing loophole for sexual assault
Oklahoma court ruled forced oral sex where the victim was intoxicated from alcohol cannot be criminalised.
Port Arthur massacre 20 years on: How the Tasmania shooting transformed Australia's gun laws
Twenty years ago, on 28 April 1996, Martin Bryant shot and killed 35 people in Port Arthur, Tasmania.
Junior doctors' strike: What patients need to know about the first 'all-out' strike
Junior doctors will go on full strike from 8am-5pm on Tuesday 26 April and Wednesday 27 April.
Chernobyl 30th anniversary: Facts, figures and stats on the world's worst nuclear disaster
The fourth reactor of Chernobyl's nuclear power plant in Ukraine exploded on 26 April, 1986.
Nepal earthquake one year on: Why was it so destructive and can another disaster be prevented?
On the first anniversary of the Nepal earthquake, geologists speak to IBTimes UK about why it was so destructive.
Nepal earthquake one year on: Himalayan region has 'much worse events in not too distant future'
Another major earthquake could strike Nepal after a 7.8 magnitude quake devastated the region on 25 April 2015.