People
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World
Chile Rejects Conservative Constitution
The South American country’s struggle to adopt a new national charter illustrates the challenges of democracy.
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US
Where Will Abortion Rights Land?
Post-Roe voting might bring America to a new consensus — but only if the voters keep getting their say.
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World
In Rightward Shift, New Zealand Reconsiders Pro-Maori Policies
The nation has long been lauded for trying to do right by its Indigenous people, but a new government may force a reckoning of Māori affairs.
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World
At Least 61 Migrants Drown Off Libya, Agency Says
The vessel set off with 86 people on board, the International Organization for Migration in Libya said, and women and children were among those who died in the shipwreck.
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Newyork
‘You’ve Got Mail’ Was the Last Great New York Rom-Com
On the occasion of its 25th anniversary, a look back at what the movie tells us about love, books, money, urbanism and the internet.
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World
A Sudanese City Took in Many Fleeing War. Now, Fighting Has Spread There.
Clashes on the outskirts of Wad Madani threaten a city that is the center of aid operations and home to tens of thousands of people displaced in an eight-month war.
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US
On the Texas Border, Folk Healers Bring Modern Touches to Their Ancient Practice
ACROSS THE COUNTRY On the Texas Border, Folk Healers Bring Modern Touches to Their Ancient Practice Known as curanderas, they carry on a tradition long revered in local Hispanic culture. Sasha García monitors the candles that she is burning for a ...
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World
As Israel Weighs How to Honor Oct. 7 Victims, Festival Exhibit Serves as ‘Hallowed Space’
A backgammon set suspended midgame. Tents and folding picnic chairs dotted among the trees. A psychedelic dance floor with downtempo and chillout trance playing in the background as video screens show images of flushed, ecstatic young people moving ...
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Newyork
I Live in California. What Do I Owe Climate-Denying Kentuckians?
The magazine’s Ethicist columnist on the duty citizens have to support one another, even across political divides.
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Newyork
What’s Driving Former Progressives to the Right?
In a new essay in the progressive magazine In These Times, the writers Kathryn Joyce and Jeff Sharlet grapple with the contemporary version of an old phenomenon: erstwhile leftists decamping to the right. There have been plenty of high-profile ...