To Have or Not Have Children
A new book earnestly wrestles with what it means to bring a person into the world.
![Silhouette of a pregnant woman](https://cdn.theatlantic.com/thumbor/7JAmwSTMYYh3Bc4SKvW0jjWch5Y=/438x0:1563x1125/80x80/media/img/mt/2024/05/children_decision_1/original.jpg)
A new book earnestly wrestles with what it means to bring a person into the world.
A new book explores the “mating gap” and why women are struggling to find a male co-parent.
Gender, rather than race or age or immigration status, has become the country’s sharpest social fault line.
Condoms, birth control, and other items are harder to get in the developing world because of the pandemic. That is putting lives at risk.
The country’s governing party, which just won another election, has married right-wing social policy with left-wing economic policy.
The Ottoman-era personal status laws apply differently to each of 15 religion-based groups, effectively outlaw secular marriage or divorce, and codify discrimination against women