Women's strike, school funding, paleo plaque, and more.
A dispatch from the “Day Without a Woman” rally in New York
Republican Representative Pete Sessions has proposed the "World's Greatest Healthcare Plan of 2017.”
Today is International Women’s Day. It also happens to be the 100th anniversary of the start of the revolution that…
More than a decade ago, Liberia made history. A new biography of Ellen Johnson Sirleaf recounts how.
A 20-minute film takes us to Sevnica, Slovenia, now preparing for a tourism boom thanks to the 2016 election.
The president’s business partners in the capital city of Baku have ties to corruption not only there but in Iran as well.
For International Women’s Day 2017, a glimpse of what the workplace was like for women a century ago, in 1917.
For International Women’s Day 2017, Reuters photographers around the world sought out women from many different backgrounds and cultures, and created portraits of them on the job.
The Kansas Supreme Court ordered the state to confront the inequality of its public-school funding.
Some ate woolly rhinos; some were vegetarians.
An innovative program has helped patients taper off addictive painkillers, but is it cutting some people off from the medications they need?
L.A. Kauffman, a historian of radical protest in America, fits the “Day Without a Woman” into history.
The generous Grand Rapids resident and the tone-deaf Trump official
The Knesset passed a law that would deny entry to some foreign activists who support boycotting the Jewish state.
The Nobel laureate Angus Deaton discusses extreme poverty, opioid addiction, Trump voters, robots, and rent-seeking.
On Wednesday, the organizers of the Women’s March encouraged participation in the “A Day Without a Woman” strike.
Olivier Assayas’s new film stars Kristen Stewart as a grief-stricken Parisian fashionista who moonlights as a medium.
Inbox maintenance was taking up a lot of Dan Ariely’s time, so he decided to study it as he would anything else.
Ninety-two percent of citizen petitions filed against generics come from brand-name drug companies.
Why technological failures are such handy metaphors
The president has energized his own supporters, and his attacks on established institutions have triggered a systemic immune response in the body politic.
A black medical student’s critique of selective colleges
A deadly ISIS attack in Kabul, Kim Jong Nam’s son appears in a video, and more from the United States and around the world.
Even before they grew strong legs, their eyes surged in size.
Exploring the galaxy will only give our problems more room to expand.
In South Africa, student anger over tuition costs and access has bubbled over—and some observers say the tumult is a harbinger of worldwide unrest.
Mohsin Hamid’s striking, lyrical new novel explores how lives can be upended in the blink of an eye.
Despite his boasts, the president built his success on his willingness to toss aside mentors, friends, and family members during moments of frustration and chaos.
Under-the-radar workers have scrubbed objectionable material from Facebook and other sites since well before the fake-news controversy.