How marginalized groups are working to counteract historical wealth inequality.
Germany, Serbia, and Sweden hosted tens of thousands of migrants three years ago. Can the U.S. take a page from the EU as caravans mass at our border?
“That your days may soon change, that the love your parents and relatives feel for you glow inside you to give you strength.”
“Que sus días cambien pronto y que el amor que sus padres y familiares sienten por ustedes brille fuerte dentro de ustedes y les de fuerza.”
Election night’s most surprising Democratic victory defies the trend of a growing urban-rural chasm.
The story of the Central American refugees is so essentially American that it’s a wonder we can’t recognize how much they belong here.
I want us to go humbly to the very people our culture tried to exterminate to listen to what they can teach us.
Throughout history, the biblical story of Exodus has inspired people around the world fleeing persecution.
Drought, crop failure, storms, and land disputes pit the rich against the poor, and Central America is ground zero for climate change.
A conversation with Edgar Villanueva on decolonizing the nation’s biggest charities.
Philanthropic organizations invest about 93 percent of their money in Wall Street. But they are starting to make better choices.
How my hospital ID has become an “I exist” card.
No longer willing to collude in their oppression, Central Americans are coming to the U.S. in the open and en masse.
O+ Festival was created to address the lack of affordable medical care for a chronically underinsured population: artists and musicians.
Once upon a time, mesquite got no respect. Now this desert survivor is celebrated as a sustainable food source and a symbol of the borderlands.
And I spend a lot of time thinking about what they’re missing.
Blackness is way more than an aesthetic.
Despite the holiday’s false origin tale, we can celebrate in ways that honor those originally dishonored by the day.
KSER’s Ed Bremer interviews three contributors to YES! Magazine’s Fall 2018 Mental Health Issue: Travis Lupick emphasizes cultivating healthy connections with other people to address mental illness, Michaela Haas illuminates
Monarchs lay their eggs on this perennial wildflower along their migratory path to Canada. Plant it now and be nature’s ultimate wingman.
Gratitude for what feeds us opens us to awe and beauty.
In 1992, after years of advocating for modern infrastructure, Black residents of rural Exmore, Virginia, took matters into their own hands.
Take it from someone who gave away his inheritance 35 years ago: The act of distributing your wealth will propel you forward.
Activists among tribes want to rally the Native vote. Because when they show up to the polls, they’ve shown significant political power.
These organizations help kids of all economic, racial, and ethnic backgrounds benefit from adventures in nature.
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