The Paramount+ show may have been bogged down by illogical plot twists and confusing storylines in recent seasons, but it ...
Online influence operations based in Russia, China, Iran, and Israel are using artificial intelligence in their efforts to ...
Experts say much work still needs to be done to fix harassment and sexual assault problems in the legal profession.
Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito has declined to recuse himself from two Jan. 6-related cases despite calls to do so after news reports said controversial flags were flown outside his properties.
Lawmakers in Colombia have voted to ban bullfighting, a centuries-old tradition in the South American country.
A decades-long debate at the heart of Taiwan's identity and history is roiling once again: whether to remove hundreds of statues of former authoritarian leader Chiang Kai-shek.
NPR's Michel Martin talks with A.O. Scott, a critic with The New York Times, about the history of presidents and their pups.
Voters in Mexico are likely to elect their first female president this weekend. Could that change anything for women in Mexico, which has the second highest rate of femicide in Latin America?
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with journalist Sarah Stillman, a writer for The New Yorker, about her reporting on efforts to grant children the "right to hug" their incarcerated parents.
Edition host Steve Inskeep visits an A-I company in Shanghai to find out how that company helps illustrate the larger tech war between the United States and China.
María Zardoya and Josh Conway founded The Marías as a couple. They talk to NPR's A Martinez about how their breakup has shaped their latest album, "Submarine." It comes out Friday.
In "Minority Rule," Ari Berman writes, "a shrinking conservative white minority is relentlessly exploiting the undemocratic ...