It’s the cloudless map’s first major makeover since 2013.
It happened gradually—and until the U.S. figures out how to treat the problem, it will only get worse.
Critics claim British voters were unqualified to decide such a complicated issue. But democracy itself isn’t the problem.
Three Atlantic staffers discuss “The Winds of Winter,” the tenth and final episode of the sixth season.
American society increasingly mistakes intelligence for human worth.
It’s not because they’re inherently harsher leaders than men, but because they often respond to sexism by trying to distance themselves from other women.
The party's presumptive nominee and the Republican National Committee are working together to avoid a revolt at the July convention, according to The New York Times.
Millions of men in the prime of their lives are missing from the labor force. Could a big U.S. housing construction project bring them back?
The rapper has said celebrities shouldn't be disrespected, and yet here are nine minutes of naked Taylor Swift.
A Yale law professor suggests that oft-ignored truth should inform debates about what statutes and regulations to codify.
On swallowing “sorry”s and replacing them with simple “thank you”s.
And why managers are so bad at it.
The June 23 vote represents a huge popular rebellion against a future in which British people feel increasingly crowded within—and even crowded out of—their own country.
A look at the punk band’s cultural impact, 30 years after its last live show
With a focus on equity, the northern European country has quietly joined the ranks of the global education elite.
A hotly contested, supposedly ancient manuscript suggests Christ was married. But believing its origin story—a real-life Da Vinci Code, involving a Harvard professor, a onetime Florida pornographer, and an escape from East Germany—requires a big leap of faith.
The Supreme Court has struck down parts of a major Texas law regulating access to the procedure. To do so, it had to navigate competing claims of medical fact and an intent to protect women.
Texas’s H.B.2 statute imposed regulations that yielded no health benefit but made abortion a lot harder to get. The Supreme Court wasn’t fooled.