News

Laila Lalami's dystopian novel centers on a woman who's been incarcerated because an algorithm flagged her as a crime risk.
Federal funding freezes continue to hit community organizations, Ferguson signs more bills as legislative session nears its ...
Elon Musk says he'll cut back his work with the federal government to one to two days per week. He said demand for Teslas is ...
With the U.S. now reporting more than 800 measles cases, a new poll from health policy research group KFF finds that many ...
The film “Warfare” inserts us in an intense combat situation, even as it ignores the larger political implications, Dan ...
At the center of the case is the school system in Montgomery County, Md., the most religiously diverse county in the U.S., ...
Hear the future of music this May during the KPBX Kids’ Concert, MusicFest Northwest. SPR’s Morning Classical Host, Jim ...
Many Catholic Latinos across the state of Washington are mourning the death of Pope Francis – a pope who, they say, not only ...
NPR speaks to Rep. Troy Carter, who visited a detention center in his home state Louisiana with a Democratic delegation to meet Columbia student Mahmoud Khalil and others recently detained by ICE.
NPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense Evelyn Farkas about Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth's use of private Signal chats and the turmoil inside the Pentagon.
Some international students are suing the U.S. government after their visas have been cancelled. Many of them say they have never been convicted of a crime.
Most — but not all — political scientists are deeply troubled by the president's attempts to expand executive power, ...