News

Chilean families are having only one child on average. U.S. birthrates are also dropping but it's unclear whether the U.S.
Without a deal in hand, Republicans say they may try to change Senate rules when they return in September to speed up the ...
Arkansas Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders is traveling next week on a trade mission to Israel, her first visit since her father ...
A popular women's dating advice app suffered a major data breach, revealing users' drivers' licenses, messages and other ...
Dozens of Palestinians were killed, many while waiting for food aid, amid a deepening starvation crisis and despite Israeli ...
The State Department denied one Venezuelan Little League team entry into the U.S., but allowed another. NPR's Scott Simon ...
Some Ukrainians have already returned after fleeing Russia's invasion, and almost half of the more than 5 million still ...
NPR's David Folkenflik shares what it's been like covering President Trump's contentious relationship with the media, including public media and NPR itself.
NPR's Sarah McCammon speaks with Carol Mason about her new book, From the Clinics to the Capitol: How Opposing Abortion Became Insurrectionary.
NPR's Sarah McCammon talks to Kori Schake of the American Enterprise Institute, about her recent piece in Foreign Affairs, Dispensable Nation: America in a Post-American World.
Experts say famine's unfolding in Gaza, prompting global outrage, calls for Israel to end the war and acknowledgement by Trump of starvation.
A nearly wordless meditation on the building blocks of civilization — stone and concrete — Viktor Kossakovsky's documentary Architecton is a dazzling sensory overload.