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Around the U.S., progressive candidates are preparing to run for office and push for a liberal opposition that lives up to its ideals.
To fill the growing vacuum of history education in the U.S., racial justice organizers are offering truth-based curricula.
Indigenous scientists are hurrying to learn what they can about intact old-growth forests before they are gone.
Video games will not fix a broken world, but queering them can show players and non-players alike how to reimagine ours.
When Renee Lau, a special projects coordinator at the trans-led housing and wellness center Baltimore Safe Haven, transitioned at the age of 63, she lost everything. “My marriage fell apart,” she says ...
Celebrating the Tribe’s victory in their decades-long struggle to legally resume hunting gray whales.
In 1992, a Canadian ecologist named William Rees coined the term “ ecological footprint,” a measurement of how much any entity was impacting the planet’s ecology. A decade later, British Petroleum ...
Inside a maximum security prison in Argentina, Liberté offers more than education and recreation for incarcerated people—it offers lessons in solidarity.
In the wake of AIPAC’s ouster of two pro-Palestine congressional Democrats, a Jewish American digs into the reality of Zionist influence in American politics.
High-profile, disruptive protests can lead to increased polarization—but often still yield increased public support for the protest’s goals, even if the tactics are criticized.
The long-term solution to the plastics problem is stopping the flow at its source. But even if we were to magically achieve that today, the world would still be awash in nearly a century’s worth of ...
France is famous for its fine wines and cheese. However, among a more niche audience, the country is also known as a zero-waste leader. Besides producing one of the world’s most famous zero-waste ...
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