In Cuba, Afro Hair Honors Identity and Cultural Roots As a historian and hairstylist, the owner of community salon Rizo Libre wants her services to go far beyond hair. Rachel Pereda | May 10, 2024
Water | Women Mothering As a Radical Climate Solution Emily Raboteau’s latest book is a meditation on how we can more clearly see and care for all we hold dear. Breanna Draxler | May 9, 2024
Activism Why So Many Young Asian Americans Stand With Palestine This Asian American Pacific Islander Heritage Month, let’s celebrate anti-war organizers. Cathi Choi | May 8, 2024
Wealth and inequality | Wealth Breaking Up With Capitalism A paradigm shift for our economy begins when we name and see the anti-democratic bias that lies at the heart of our capital-centric system. Marjorie Kelly | May 7, 2024
Reproductive Justice | Health Justice | Reproductive rights | Mental health | Health care How Mexico’s Abortion Activists Care for Each Other—and Themselves As volunteer collectives bring Mexico to the forefront of abortion access, they have also prioritized emotional wellness. Chantal Flores | May 6, 2024
Activism | Consumerism | Sustainable food and farming Bringing France’s Waste Prevention Plan to Life Regional waste-reduction programs hold lessons for communities across the globe. Joseph Winters | May 3, 2024
Labor | Jobs Union-Busting Is Rampant. Here’s How to Fight Back. A two-step card check process is efficient, making it easier for workers to unionize with a simple majority. Anusha Rahman, Hannah L. McKinney | May 1, 2024
Immigration | Mental health | Aging and dying Easing the Toll of Long-Distance Grief For immigrants navigating loss from afar, support can come from community, new rituals, and better policies. Alice Sun | Apr 30, 2024
Books | Gender justice | Women How to Bury Your Abusive Husband and the Laws That Shielded Him Domestic violence isn’t funny. But Alexia Casale’s debut novel finds humor in survivors taking matters into their own hands. Brijana Prooker | Apr 29, 2024
Disability Justice | Health Justice | Health care Can California Kids Get Specialty Care Sooner? Children are more likely to survive when treated by pediatric specialists than those trained to treat adults; but there’s a shortage of these specialists in California and nationwide. Claudia Boyd-Barrett | Apr 26, 2024
Native rights | Indigenous lands A Land Back Victory on Haida Gwaii British Columbia affirms Indigenous ownership of the 200 islands the Haida have stewarded for millennia, marking a new path toward reconciliation. Serena Renner | Apr 25, 2024
Books | Women Who Gets to Be a Mother? Making motherhood accessible for all requires moving away from punitive models—including foster care—that criminalize poverty. Andrea Ruggirello | Apr 23, 2024
Native rights | Activism | Pipeline resistance | Indigenous lands | Pollution | Water Photo Essay: The Healing Power of Matriarchs A photographer’s connections with eight Indigenous women have helped her come to terms with her own Native ancestry and colonial trauma. Roxann Murray | Apr 22, 2024
Mental health Why Hope Is Different Than Optimism Hope is not a positive expectation but a moral commitment. Kendra Thomas | Apr 19, 2024
Rethinking Arab American Heritage Month Cultural heritage months are most useful when they’re leveraged as an opportunity to demand justice. Stephanie Abraham | Apr 16, 2024
LGBTQ Rights | Gender justice | Health care | LGBTQ+ Serious About Gender Exploration? There’s a Doula for That. Just like birth doulas, gender doulas support people at all stages of their gender journey. Celeste Hamilton Dennis | Apr 15, 2024
Water | Climate How Folklore Can Shape Our Climate Futures It’s not just our homes that are at risk from climate change; it’s our customs, songs, and stories. Katie Myers | Apr 12, 2024
Music Beyoncé’s Requiem for Black Country Dreams With “Cowboy Carter,” Beyoncé is not only topping the country charts, but also challenging old narratives about genre. Francesca T. Royster | Apr 11, 2024
Climate The Climate Lessons a Typhoon Taught Us A decade after Typhoon Haiyan decimated the Philippines, the city of Tacloban is setting a new standard for surviving global catastrophes. Gabes Torres | Apr 9, 2024
Education Chess Captures Life Lessons for Argentinian Youth Bottle caps transform into queens, knights, and pawns that help kids learn how to regulate emotions, socialize, and resolve conflicts. Eva Marabotto | Apr 8, 2024
Water Ending Water Apartheid in Palestine Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank fighting for the right to a homeland, and for their basic right to water—which Israel continues to deny. Marianne Dhenin | Apr 8, 2024
Climate For the Good of the Hive A bee caretaker learns just how much humans can gain from tuning in to nature’s cues. Jamie Liu | Apr 5, 2024
Climate The Water Came Early Grappling with the fantasy and memory of flooding on California’s last remaining almond farm. Zoe Young | Apr 4, 2024
Climate Rooted in the Diaspora Evolving technology and place-based knowledge help a family connect with joy while far from home and one another. Sanjana Sekhar | Apr 3, 2024
Climate Rewilding a Grieving Heart A father copes with the loss of his daughter by giving back to nature, as she had wanted. Andrew Kenneson | Apr 2, 2024