A palliative care nurse explains what to expect in the last days and hours.
Walking a mile in someone else’s shoes is more than just a phrase for people working at the intersection of psychology and technology.
She can’t remember recipes, and food doesn’t taste the same, but Paula Wolfert believes that what she eats is key to helping her slow her cognitive decline.
It was just stuff. Until it wasn’t.
Withdrawing support, both intentional and inadvertent, from harmful entertainers begins with knowing how they make their money.
White Americans need immigrants and diversity. That’s not do-gooder talk. It’s math.
Since 2010, the Unist’ot’en have fought the transit of fossil fuels through their hereditary lands. In the last few days, police finally moved in. Here’s how we got to this point.
A program that doubles the spending power for food stamp recipients who buy fresh produce just got more funding.
Here’s where to find a safe space for queer and trans people to get fit or stay healthy.
Black women have been poorly represented in the mainstream. So a new yearlong fellowship prepares women to redefine the stories that are being told and control who gets to tell them.
This peer-to-peer lender left big finance behind to invest in community.
Doing something every day can be profoundly helpful in giving people hope, and it’s a path to change.
The climate conversation we are going to have in 30 years—or in 12 years—will depend entirely on what we do today. And I mean today. This week, this season, this year.
Threats of global catastrophe won’t move people to action. Only the heart can inspire zeal.
Time has run out to convince colonized newsrooms that Indigenous issues and perspectives are necessary to the national narrative.
And we wouldn’t even have to tax the rich to pay for it.
The effort to divest from Wall Street—and stop environment-killing projects gained momentum after the historic pipeline protest. Here’s what a city needs, and could gain, from municipal banking.
These are the most provocative and influential findings published during this past year.
Adults who prepare quality meals for children are offering something more important than a nutrition lesson.
The year’s must-reads help to weather hard times and make a difference in the lives of those around us.
In 2019, we must move beyond the myth of the lone individual to recognize our deep interdependence and responsibilities for one another and nature.
Our fragile democracy needs the will of the people to protect it, but the events of 2018 prove that Americans are up to the challenge.
The caravan movement is sustained by self-organized migrants and the volunteers who stand with them. It’s an organized, mobilized hope.
Tap into an ancient tradition with this recipe for lamb’s wool wassail. No sheep required.
A network of public banks could underwrite the new New Deal in the same way President Franklin Roosevelt financed the original.
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