Incubator farms help seasonal workers start their own businesses, where they get better pay and the support of a community.
Nick Hanauer, venture capitalist and self-described “plutocrat,” says a healthy economy and an effective democracy depend on a thriving middle class of workers.
In this Q and A, the talented Khalifa talks about how she became interested in issues of racial justice, her work with the Dream Defenders, and the power of social media.
You know the model: Consumers purchase a share of the season’s harvest upfront and get a box of fresh produce each week from the farm. Now you can get your medicine that way too.
More than 400 workers and supporters were arrested on Thursday amid a nationwide wave of walkouts and demonstrations.
In the next 20 years, many American family farmers are likely to retire—putting enormous amounts of land on the market. Here's how they're connecting with young farmers to make sure the family farm survives.
The savings from 2013 alone could pay for dental care for 262,000 Americans for an entire year.
Sure, life goes on even if it is devoid of buttercream. But when it is there, life just seems so perfect—even if you only get to eat buttercream once or twice in a year.
Photos by Autumn Azure Photography.
A new bill provides two years of tuition at a community college for participating high school grads who might otherwise face a 7.5 percent unemployment rate—and other states are already following suit.
Useful as it may be as journalistic shorthand, “mansplaining” is cultural bubblegum in comparison to Solnit’s actual body of work.
Utah, Minnesota, and Washington have seen traffic fatalities decline by 40 percent. Here's how they did it.
We asked psychologists, user experience designers, and writers what web users could to do to promote more empathic interaction in online places. Here's what they said.
47 million Americans live beneath the official poverty line, under a daily judgment of failure. The question today is: Whose failure?
Seattle's path to a $15 minimum wage is a winding tale of effective organizing, smart messaging, and blind dumb luck. It is also a roadmap for bypassing partisan gridlock—one city at a time.
For low-wage workers, Seattle's minimum wage increase means a chance to go to college, pay the rent, and visit the dentist.
While making the season's tomato sauce at three in the morning, I mull over the origins of my desire to farm.
In Germany, auto workers get paid well and their companies still profit. Author Thom Hartmann on why living wages and corporate success don't have to be mutually exclusive.
Sevier County, Tenn., diverts 70 percent of waste from landfills—and it's becoming more efficient all the time.
Unless the legal foundation for local self-governance is truly built on the rights of communities, victories like the one in New York can easily be overturned.
At the local farmers market, Ferguson residents find a safe place to deal with the trauma of Michael Brown's death.
Three major international meetings about climate change are on the horizon. Is this the moment to fix the failures of Copenhagen?
Teachers and educators collect ideas and resources for how to talk about Ferguson with students of all ages.
“There’s a reason you separate the military and the police. One fights the enemy of the state, the other serves and protects the people. When the military becomes both, then the enemies of the state tend to become the people.”
The tragedy in Ferguson helps us understand why people of color aren't as active as they could be in the climate movement—and what white allies can do to change that.
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