Reading paths
Browse by geography & themes
Follow regions and recurring story threads across the archive—without thin placeholder pages.
Newsorga attaches two kinds of editorial tags to some stories: country tags (ISO alpha-2 regions for geography-led reading) and topic tags (short slugs for recurring themes—institutions, policy arcs, technologies). Tags are optional metadata; they do not change bylines, outbound links, or correction policy on individual articles.
To avoid thin index pages, we only generate hub URLs when a tag appears on at least 8 distinct stories. Each hub opens with a short, data-driven summary (desk mix, date span, story count) and then lists the same dated grid as the archive—headline, dek, and link to the full piece, with lead thumbnails only on page one. Tags with fewer stories stay discoverable through article bodies and the main archive; they are not duplicated as empty shells here.
If you are researching a region or theme, start from the indexes below. For a flat, calendar-grouped view of everything in the index, use All stories.
- Regions
- 15
- Themes
- 33
- Hub threshold
- 8+ stories
Regions
15 with deep indexes
Open a region hub for day-grouped stories, counts, and desk mix—same layout as the archive (thumbnails on page one only).
Themes
33 with deep indexes
Theme hubs collect cross-desk threads (policy, health, markets, culture) under one internal slug.
- Automotive 31
- Business 8
- Celebrity news 8
- Climate 13
- Criminal justice 8
- Culture 12
- Diplomacy 22
- Elections 19
- Electric vehicles 29
- Energy security 8
- European politics 9
- Football 37
- Geopolitics 16
- Government 61
- Hantavirus 11
- Health 21
- Infectious disease 10
- Justice 11
- Law and justice 8
- Markets 40
- Media 13
- Middle East 11
- Music 12
- Public health 18
- Public safety 10
- Science 14
- Security 10
- Sports 18
- State politics 10
- Technology 28
- Television 18
- US politics 8
- World 12
Full directories
Sortable tables of every qualifying tag, with story counts—useful when you want the full list instead of scanning pills.