It's common for young people leaving jails and prisons to end up back behind bars, often after lapses related to untreated ...
An attempt to identify and explain some of the biggest things that happened each week, and draw attention to some that have ...
The 19th century term describes the perceived right of Americans to use force or the threat of force to wrest desireable land ...
The egg market has been hit hard by avian flu, but wings are abundant and relatively affordable this year. So what gives?
The House education committee is charged with forging consensus on the nation's education policy. But at a recent meeting, ...
Some companies have announced diversity rollbacks — but many more are deleting or softening language from their investor ...
The rebels continued advances in eastern Congo despite their own announcement of a cease-fire. The U.N. secretary-general ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with Nabil Fahmy, former Egyptian foreign minister and ambassador to the U.S., about how Egypt views President Trump's plans for Gaza.
Despite a free trade agreement with Mexico, U.S. potato growers had been mostly blocked from selling their potatoes in Mexico for more than 24 years. Planet Money traveled to Idaho to understand why.
Shortly after Kendrick Lamar took home five Grammy awards, he's getting his biggest single audience ever, as the featured artist of this year's Super Bowl halftime show.
The new movie "Jazzy" follows two young girls as they navigate the ups and downs of adolescence in South Dakota. NPR's Michel Martin speaks with the film's director and young star.
NPR's A Martinez speaks with Eugene Cho, president of Bread for the World, about how the tumult at the U.S. Agency for International Development is affecting efforts to fight global food insecurity.