The first foreign leader to visit President Donald Trump at the White House in his second term will be wanted for war crimes.
Seemingly irresistible just a few years ago, movements aimed at addressing systemic inequalities are now in retreat. Can they recover?
In his first 24 hours in office, President Donald Trump unleashed a series of executive orders. These 22 orders, ...
The massive, multinational corporation announced Monday that it would bend to an executive order, signed by Trump on his ...
The executive order, titled “Defending Women From Gender Ideology Extremism and ... I woke up this week as officially a second-class citizen, simply because I exist in a way that the party ...
Key takeaways: <li /> Richard Edelman came into the firm his father founded in 1978, when it was a $6 million agency; today, it is a b ...
Before US President Donald J. Trump returned to the Oval Office and began systematically attacking initiatives related to diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) across US institutions, Alabama ...
So what can we do to counter the trends, to resist the backsliding of our democratic republic and the backlash against the progress made in the long and hard-fought struggle for civil and human rights ...
The World Economic Forum (WEF), held every January in Davos, Switzerland, remains a useful place to take the temperature of global capitalism and to assess its leaders’ outlooks for the year ahead.
An insulting and demeaning progressive paternalism when it comes to Americans with disabilities is further marginalizing us ...
"The ground beneath our feet is perpetually shifting. And it’s hard to keep our balance," writes Alissa Quart.
Moreover, not allowing an entire class of citizens with disabilities access ... it consigns us to second-class status and exacerbates the economic marginalization of the disability community.