America’s Short-Lived Safety Net Has Almost Fully Unraveled
The American Rescue Plan created unprecedented programs protecting parents and young children, renters, and childcare providers. Now they are almost entirely gone.
Print Magazine
The American Rescue Plan created unprecedented programs protecting parents and young children, renters, and childcare providers. Now they are almost entirely gone.
Voters could turn two private utilities into public goods. The corporations are fighting it tooth and nail.
The Nation spoke with the journalist and author about the ways in which domestic violence and the ongoing attacks on bodily autonomy impede the democratic process.
Meet the performers serving queer education in a deep-red state.
Activists marched for three days straight, demanding that Congress finally change the immigration registry date.
The Fifth Circuit judge is a far-right extremist and provocateur—and he’s angling for a seat on the Supreme Court.
Aggregated real estate listings like Zillow have distorted our understanding of what makes a house a home.
Thanks to Ron DeSantis’s education policies, the state is seeing an unprecedented exodus of teachers, professors, and college students.
How Bill Gates and agribusiness giants are throttling small farmers in Africa and the Global South.
FOSTA-SESTA made sex workers less safe and the Internet less free. A spate of new laws is deepening the damage.
Ballot measures represent the greatest hope for restoring abortion access in many red states. Should they replicate Roe v. Wade, or aim for something better?
A new volume collects the pioneering French comic artist's work.
While jury trials might have afforded citizens the chance to witness—and even contest—the criminalization of the working class, plea bargains have allowed this criminalization to happen witho...
His fiction, which ranged from slapstick humor to sheer terror, fixated on the lives of those society discarded.