Abortion advocates reeling from the end of Roe v. Wade can look to Mexico, Colombia, and Argentina for perspective, strategy, and hope.
Defensoras del aborto, desanimadas por la anulación de la sentencia en el caso “Roe vs. Wade”, que establecía el derecho constitucional al aborto, pueden dirigir sus miradas hacia México, Colombia y Argentina para obtener perspectiva, redefinir estrategias y recobrar esperanzas.
The fashion industry is designing adaptable clothing for disabled people, but is that enough to undo the industry’s ableism?
It was born, as so many of us are, from a collision.
When it comes to protecting chosen family, LGBTQ couples face unique struggles.
Hearty, well-balanced soups warm us up and boost our vitality. They can also draw out beautiful memories and connect us to our human senses.
Therapeutic drama therapy opens the door to healing through performance.
Fatness is treated as a moral failure, but the facts show it is all systemic.
Although tattoo art has origins in communities of color, today it is largely a white-dominated field in the U.S. Three tattoo artists of color share their views of the changing field.
The Beauty of Aging LGBTQ Couples.
A Dalit American leader offers a profound meditation on the violence of caste apartheid, pathways to abolition, and collective healing.
From “Hacks” to “Queen Sugar,” pop culture begins spotlighting the sexuality of women over 50.
From Doodle to a future $20 bill, Harriet Tubman is a cultural icon. But comforting images don’t show the disabled Black woman who was not only a guide, but a freedom fighter.
Gloria Alamrew is an Ethiopian Canadian culture writer and editor. She writes about Blackness, culture, and womanhood, and the myriad ways they intersect. Alamrew has written for distinguished publications such
The Fall 2022 issue explored a space where many of us spend most of our waking hours: work. The coronavirus pandemic prompted many workers—and businesses—to reassess their relationship to
Dear Reader, For most of my life, my conception of the body was about the individual body—more specifically, my body. I’ve been fortunate to love mine, most of the time.
Katherine Macomber Millman of Port Townsend, Washington What kind of work and/or volunteering do you do? I’ve been doing body-centered healing work since 1986, after focusing for over 10 years
Nonprofit organizations attract employees from diverse backgrounds, but often fail to create affirming workplace cultures for them.
Conservatives fuming over critical race theory fail to recognize a fundamental truth about the United States: Diversity is our strength.
Colonization, through genocide, land theft, and the imposition of private property, has dispossessed Indigenous and Black peoples of their homelands across the continents for generations.
Schools are federally mandated to provide extra support to students experiencing homelessness, but many students—particularly those of color—continue to fall through the cracks in California.
“Building the Block” is an original six-part series examining how communities are building cultural sustainability in their own neighborhoods and beyond.
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