A Glimpse of the Chibok Schoolgirls
A video released Sunday purportedly shows some of the students abducted by a Nigerian militant group more than two years ago.
A video released Sunday purportedly shows some of the students abducted by a Nigerian militant group more than two years ago.
The actor perhaps best known for playing R2-D2 has died after a long illness.
Authorities said a man armed with a knife and a flammable fluid injured six people.
Republicans are rallying behind Jason Lewis, a radio provocateur famous for racist and misogynistic rants who's running for Congress.
U.S.-backed Kurdish and Arab fighters fought for more than two months to push the Islamic State out of Manbij, Syria.
Since 9/11, national-security officials have made policy on a myth of American invulnerability. They should have been preparing everyday citizens for the worst in order to make the country stronger.
The presidential candidate has resurrected divisive GOP campaign tactics that target and alienate minorities.
A Democratic landslide in November could flip a dozen or more legislative majorities that Republicans captured during the Obama era.
Washington’s reliance on private contractors to fight its wars has mutated into a strategic vulnerability.
In the heart of Washington, D.C., one family lives off the energy produced from a single solar panel.
Eleanor Ambos is going blind, yet she’s determined to preserve her artistic vision.
For some, the idea of avoiding aging is a more powerful behavioral motivator than the risk of melanoma.
A short animation cleverly explores the etymology of a ubiquitous food.
A woman living in the Canadian Rockies is the only visible transgender person in a remote region.
China’s painful history with imperialism and the West highlights a powerful, enduring aspect of its national psychology at the Olympic Games.
Mauro Morandi is set to be evicted from the Mediterranean island he has called home for nearly 30 years. Can it remain a paradise without him?
A U.S. airstrike killed Hafiz Sayed Khan, the leader of the group in Afghanistan, the Pentagon said.
The highlights from seven days of reading about the world
Authorities said a man armed with a knife and a flammable fluid injured six people.
At least 11 explosions have struck various tourist-friendly parts of the country, killing four people and wounding more than 30.
Two cases were announced on Thursday, a major setback for the global campaign to eradicate the virus.
The candidate's new economic adviser is not above trashing her team to get ahead.
As a startup, it can sometimes be hard to navigate the shifting sands of race, gender, and power. But some mistakes are easy to avoid.
Crowds clashed with police in reaction to a fatal police shooting in the Wisconsin city Saturday.
Young fighters find their way in and out of the ring
The school hopes reshaping how young people enter classrooms will keep them there longer.
The Democratic nominee released her 2015 returns, knowing full well Donald Trump isn’t willing to reveal his.
In 2015, Nzingha Prescod became the first African American woman to win an individual medal at the Senior World Championships. Now, she's competing for the United States in Rio.
Tiny computers, microscopic art, bringing back the dodo—the future uses of the double helix
The Democratic nominee’s gains along the I-75 and I-95 corridors reflect the growing political influence of cities in the South.
More citizens should follow Khizr Khan’s example by reading the document and knowing what the words mean.
Win or lose, the GOP’s presidential nominee will trigger a lasting power shift in the party.
According to a corpus of recent search data, American voters don’t simply elect politicians. They elect husbands, wives, sons, and daughters.
The Republican nominee’s staffers and party officials will meet in Orlando during a turbulent month, Politico reports.
For his last summer in office, the president delivers a more eclectic, more interesting, and more seductive set of musical selections.
Michael Phelps beat a more than 2,000-year-old Olympic record set by the champion athlete of the ancient games.
Embraces—in victory, defeat, and everything in between—are the best part of the Olympics. A guide to their many varieties.
From French beaches and waterparks to the Olympic beach-volleyball courts, the full-length swimwear has caused controversy.
From Michael Phelps and Katie Ledecky to Simone Biles and Usain Bolt, follow the 2016 games with our handy cheat sheet.
Judoka Islam El Shahaby may face punishment for refusing to shake the hand of his Israeli opponent after a match the Egyptian lost.
Simone Biles is not the next Michael Phelps. She is not the next Usain Bolt. She is the next Simone Biles.
Organizers have signaled that the Games aren’t solely a competition among nations.
Baz Luhrmann’s grandiose new Netflix show hums with cinematic magic but has a real interest in the conditions rap rose from.
Mayor de Blasio’s proposed “ban” on the disciplinary measure may not be a ban at all.
The clear cola’s nostalgic relaunch harkens back to a time when the world’s problems seemed simple.
Archaeologists say the sandstone etchings may be 400 years old.
Techmeme lets readers enter any date since 2006 to see what it looked like that day.
The pop star’s iconic green dress revolutionized search.
A decade after leaving network news, the legendary newsman now has an audience that can talk back in real time.
A meteorologist is harnessing data from the devices’ barometers to improve local forecasting.
A Department of Justice report finds widespread constitutional violations, the targeting of African Americans, and a culture of retaliation.
Luke Dittrich discusses his account of “Patient H.M.”—and responds to his critics.
The history of science has been distorted by a longstanding conviction that correct theories about nature are always the most elegant ones.
There is a 17 to 20 percent chance that northern Oregon will be hit by a magnitude-8 quake in the next 50 years.
How scientists used nuclear explosions to date the longest-lived vertebrates in existence.
The insects use their stingers to tangle spider silk, just as people use felting needles on wool threads.
Decades of failed predictions show that nature might not work as expected.
After 30 years of development, virus-beating insects are finally being deployed in megacities around the world.
Desiree Dixon, who works at Navy Federal Credit Union, talks about the parts of her job that require a human touch.
As lenders respond to impending regulations by pushing different products, many fear that borrowers won’t be protected.
After getting fed up with her Washington, D.C., electric utility, Keya Chatterjee had her power shut off. That was seven years ago.
A hashtag-fueled celebration of crooked career paths and unlikely beginnings
After 30 years of working in the criminal-justice system, Andrew Snyder’s job is now to get first-time convicts ready to serve their sentences.
Trump and Clinton’s speeches were light on policy details and heavy on insults.
At Virginia's Twin Oaks, land, labor, and income are distributed evenly among 100 residents.
Not having kids is the new having kids.
The fizzy, fermented tea is not the cure-all that its devotees want it to be, but it still might have health benefits.
A case for investing in human health rather than paying for the consequences of inaction.
The child born to a mother infected with the virus died in Harris County, Texas.
If your heart stops beating, you’re more likely to survive in a casino or on an airplane than in a hospital.
An element of his success is voters’ equating aggression with competence.
Life is stressful enough when you’re expecting a baby.
Wildfires in Europe, competition in Rio, Seafair in Seattle, protests in Kashmir, sunflowers in Japan, ostriches in China, and much more.
Hell and High Water frames financial institutions as the enemy of common Americans, but in doing so it speaks to the nation's history.
Yes, the weird, horrible sequel to Batman v Superman made critics nauseous. But the rest of America can’t get enough.
Director David Mackenzie’s extraordinary neo-Western is a showcase for Chris Pine, Jeff Bridges, and Ben Foster.
This fantastic nonfiction from 2015 is still worth discovering and pondering today.
Baz Luhrmann’s grandiose new Netflix show hums with cinematic magic but has a real interest in the conditions rap rose from.
The hit USA drama had a stellar first year, but its second season is riddled with problems the show has proven it can avoid.
Chancellor Linda Katehi, who wasted hundreds of thousands of dollars trying to minimize the incident, has been forced to resign. But the public will keep paying her lavishly.
Mayor de Blasio’s proposed “ban” on suspensions may not be a ban at all.
Most educators don’t leave the classroom for higher pay.
Where children tinker with saws and hammers while parents stand on the sidelines
Judith Schagrin, who works for Baltimore County Children’s Services, reflects on 30 years of involvement in the foster-care system.
Critical inquiry is discouraged in modern-day Vietnamese schools. But, one student argues, there’s an encouraging trend of young people seeking out alternative viewpoints from around the world.
Two men, including a religious leader, were fatally shot in broad daylight as they left a mosque.
A U.S. District Judge ordered the radio host to reveal sources who incorrectly told him a Saudi man had financed the Boston Marathon bombings.
The former Illinois governor will remain in prison for his 14-year sentence.
Agents discovered 68 firearms, including a 3D-printed pistol that was detected probably because of its metal bullets.
Ahmed Mohamed, a 14-year-old Texas boy, was arrested last September for taking a homemade clock to school that some teachers thought looked like a bomb.
Two LAPD officers—one white and the other Hispanic—who fatally shot the unarmed black man in 2014 filed a racial-discrimination lawsuit against the police department.
“By going method, a performer can signal that he works for his art; he can make his labor visible.”
As Claressa Shields heads to Rio, she still hasn't received the recognition and endorsements that come to many other Olympic champions.
How will Chinese baby boomers impact the country's policies in the near future?
The Atlantic will explore the nation’s homeland security to examine the strengths and remaining vulnerabilities of our security apparatus and our preparedness to prevent the next terrorist attack.
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