When We Occupied Columbia in 1978, the University Didn’t Call the NYPD
Campus administrators met student demands to divest from apartheid-era South Africa. What’s changed?
Print Magazine
Campus administrators met student demands to divest from apartheid-era South Africa. What’s changed?
Columbia offers a case-study in how right-wing politicians are using exaggerated claims of anti-semitism to advance a conservative agenda.
The details of the tit-for-tat reveal that Israel is not the newly triumphant leader of an anti-Iran alliance, but a lonely pariah in a region that is entering a new era.
With Grants Pass, the Supreme Court appears set to allow cities, counties, and states to criminalize homelessness.
The US poet laureate on nature, the art of America, and her new anthology.
The state’s landmark decriminalization initiative wasn’t given a real chance.
An ode to one of the greatest working-class art forms of our time.
The mainstream media is once again covering Donald Trump like he’s a normal presidential candidate, rather than someone who represents the “abortion is murder” party.
It’s as if Israel is flaunting its ethnic cleansing of Palestinians.
Putting together a Democratic majority in 2024 requires winning back some portion of the rural working class. The good news is that it can be done. Here’s how.
The Republican Attorney Generals Association is waging a legal war to overturn reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, and climate regulations, one state at a time.
Restrictive laws don’t just take away the right to choose, say physicians and ob-gyns, but also prevent proper treatment of pregnancies.
The system may be deeply imperfect, but the stakes are too high to refuse to cast a ballot for Biden on principle.
Since Roe was overturned, thousands of people in red states have found a way to get an abortion—often thanks to providers operating at the edge of the law.
Manee Jirchat was one of the 31 Thai laborers kidnapped by Hamas on October 7. This is his story.
What climate change looks and feels like in the Himalayas.
Psychedelic-assisted therapies have been hailed as the wave of the future. They’re also becoming big business. What if most people can’t afford them?
One of the fastest-growing small cities in America relies on undocumented labor to fuel its economic explosion.
A new career-spanning book offers a portrait of Painter’s career as a historian, essayist, and most recently visual artist.
A new biography tells the story of not only Haring’s life but also the exhilarating world of New York art in the 1970s and 80s.
In Great Expectations, Cunningham examines the hope and aspirations of the Obama generation.
In her new book, the novelist and essayist examines life before and after marriage.
In her science fiction, the novelist offered not only an astringent critiques of the present but also bold visions of the future.
His final novel, Until August, serves as not only a record of his last struggles with illness but also as a document of courage.