Agora

In ancient Athens, the agora was where citizens gathered to hear news, discuss and, later, trade. The agora was the heart of the city’s political, cultural and spiritual life. It is this spirit we hope to channel in this section of the website. Here, the Agora is a public forum for discussing events unfolding in Greece and beyond.

In May 2020, we also launched a podcast called The Agora, delivering insight from our own experts and analysis from special guests. If you enjoy intelligent, lively discussion and want the bigger picture, join us for a stroll through the Agora. Our show is hosted on Acast, but you can also listen to us here:


 

Posts in Politics

Results 291 to 295 out of 385.

Photo by Myrto Papadopoulos (www.myrtopapadopoulos.com] Will SYRIZA accept the proposal from Greece's lenders?

As Greece’s lenders prepare to present Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras with their final proposal, there is one question that everyone wants the answer to: Will SYRIZA MPs support the deal? The problem is that the sui generis nature of the leftist party means it is impossible to make any safe predictions about how its parliamentarians will behave, especially when the details of the settlement are not yet known.

Contributor: Nick Malkoutzis

2 Comment(s)

Categories: Politics (385), Greece (496)

Photo by Die Linke via Flickr https://flic.kr/p/mXQWWw Alexis's choice

Alexis Tsipras seems to have chosen his path. Whether he will manage to reach the end of it is another matter, but the prime minister’s decision to shake up Greece’s negotiating team and to issue a common statement with European Commission President Jean-Claude Juncker last week made it clear that he prefers the option of agreeing with lenders rather than being left in limbo, or worse.

Contributor: Nick Malkoutzis

0 Comment(s)

Categories: Politics (385), Greece (496)

Photo by MacroPolis The faces change, the issues remain the same

Such has been the impasse between Greece and its lenders over the last three month (add a few more on if you want to look beyond just this government’s shortcomings) that markets reacted with some joy to the news on Monday that one inexperienced economics professor is replacing another as the central figure in Athens’s negotiations with creditors.

Contributor: Nick Malkoutzis

2 Comment(s)

Categories: Politics (385), Greece (496)

Results 291 to 295 out of 385.