The Garland Fund was not a typical foundation, but its history shows the potential role philanthropy can play in moments of ...
Matt and Sam talk to Jason Zengerle about his new book, Hated by All the Right People: Tucker Carlson and the Unraveling of the Conservative Mind.
For decades, national policies have compelled states to pare back eligibility and benefits for social programs. Under Trump, ...
A response to “The Demise of Conflict Studies” from our winter issue, followed by a reply by the authors. The following is a ...
Matt and Sam discuss Venezuela, Greenland, and the "Donroe Doctrine" with the Progressive International’s David Adler and Matt Kirkegaard.
This article is followed by a response by Andrew F. March, along with Michael Walzer’s reply. To read the exchange, click here. In the three and a half decades since the Iranian revolution, I have ...
David Marcus ▪ Fall 2012 An Occupy Wall Street march in New York City, October 2011 (Dissent) There is a much-recycled and certainly apocryphal tale told of an ethnographer traveling in India.
In early July, the Department of Homeland Security indulged in a little art appreciation on X, where it posted a Thomas Kinkade painting, Morning Pledge, for its 2.6 million followers to admire.
A combination of factors in recent years has contributed to a fall in the status and material well-being of Chinese women relative to men. Leta Hong Fincher ▪ Spring 2013 CP poster urges women ...
Real-estate interests have long wielded an outsized influence over national housing policy—to the detriment of African Americans. Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor ▪ Fall 2018 Richard Nixon, HUD ...
It is not just the economic climate in which our colleges and universities find themselves that determines what they charge and how they operate; it is their increasing corporatization. Nicolaus Mills ...