News
Nearly 20% of adults from 14 countries believe they won’t be able to have as many kids as they want, new research found.
The move doesn't change federal law, but doctors and abortion-rights advocates fear that it will amplify confusion.
Upending decades of precedence, the Trump Administration will exclude key information from reports on human rights.
5hOpinion
The Nation on MSNWhy We Must Keep Talking About Abortion PillsAs part of a delegation to Brazil, I saw how our countries’ respective struggles to maintain and expand reproductive justice ...
The next budget cycle gives the European Union a chance to step into a global leadership role in development aid, ...
It’s been 10 years since Donald Trump, a real estate mogul and reality TV star, rode an escalator down to a New York City press conference announcing his entry into ...
New York Magazine’s profile reveals defense secretary became more fearful after The Atlantic published his texting out what looked like war plans ...
14dOpinion
The Nation on MSNThe Human Rights Crisis We’re Ignoring In Our JailsPregnant people are undergoing constant horrors at the hands of the carceral state, and the laws we’ve passed aren’t helping ...
The New Statesman’s new editor is a critical friend of the prime minister – very critical, as it turns out, writes John Rentoul (a former deputy editor of the magazine) ...
On election night in 2024, Missouri voters became the first in the country to lift their state’s total abortion ban, with a ...
PHOENIX (AP) — Reproductive rights advocates sued Arizona on Thursday ... established by Arizona voters last November, and it’s time for them to go,” Rebecca Chan, staff attorney for the ...
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