Elisabeth Braw
Europe Correspondent
Elisabeth Braw joined Newsweek following a Visiting Fellowship at the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism at Oxford University. Previously she was Senior Reporter at the Metro International newspaper group, focusing on interviews with political and business leaders. Prior to that, she reported for Swedish newspapers from Washington, DC, and San Francisco. Elisabeth is also a freelance culture writer for The Economist, and writes about business and sustainability for the Guardian.
Russia is determined to keep out Norwegian fish.
Some worry about those Russians in Finland’s military as Moscow's incursions progress.
Italy's opera crisis has been deepening over the last 18 months.
'Brain-doping' has become more prevalent in the competitive, high-pressure business sector.
Danish companies pioneer diversity by breaking barriers and hiring people with disabilities.
Frank Jensen likes to run, ride his bicycle, have brunch in Hamlet's castle and watch his beloved Liverpool FC.
As climate change makes northern Europe warmer, Saxony is aiming to supplant the vineyards of France and Italy.
Scarcity of professional tutu-makers threatens theatre and ballet productions, but fashion colleges can't fix the problem.
Greece is unable to react to Turkey's trespassing into its territory due to lack in military funding.
Leading western venture capitalists, including Richard Branson, are investing heavily in Estonian startups.
Operation Last Chance: Nazi-hunters are on a quest to prosecute war criminals before they die.
Södertälje has welcomed 8,000 refugees in the last 12 years.
Angela Merkel may be Ed Miliband's next ally as he criticises David Cameron's approach to the European Union.
Western intelligence agencies say that the Russian leader is deliberately cultivating an erratic image.
Russia have been importing weaponry to its European exclave, from where missiles could reach Germany.
Hewn out of a mountain, Olavsvern, Norway, is one of the most impregnable hideouts in the world.
Barrack rooms and battle drills will be shared as every 17-year-old gets his or her papers in a first for Europe and NATO.
‘Israel is your home,’ said Netanyahu to Europe’s Jews last week, a vision not shared by all.
More Russian submarines have been spotted off Sweden's coast. They won't get far on Ewa Skoog Haslum's watch.
The refugee boy who calls himself Han Song claims to have travelled 7000km to Sweden by truck, rail and foot.
After 200 people were killed ten years ago, the state introduced radical integration policies that have paid off.
Fringe politicians now make up a fifth of MEPs - and Russia is looking to make friends.
Russia is deploying troops and testing missiles in the polar region, poised to commandeer its massive energy reserves
The real-life murder mystery of a British army medic, a womanising SS officer, and the niece of a famous Nazi
one European expert claims that at least one third of all Russia’s diplomats work for Putin’s intelligence agencies
Putin’s air force and navy have repeatedly intimidated its neighbours, who are mounting an armed response
Hans Modrow, East Germany’s last communist leader, is still angry 25 years on as he recounts the chaos of his country’s collapse
The tiny nation with a 'government start-up' mentality will be the first to offer e-residency in a bid to raise its profile and attract foreign investment
Sweden, Finland, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia are all reporting massively increased military trespassing by the Russian military
There are 100 Danes fighting in Syria but those who come back are treated more like rebellious teenagers than hostile soldiers beyond redemption
Copenhagen is the first of many cities to discover that the old pedal horse is an answer to many of its problems
A unisex pronoun for toddlers in Sweden is now used by adults - and the rest of Europe is following suit