Dressing for Court
For participants in high-profile cases, the courtroom can serve as a mini stage.
For participants in high-profile cases, the courtroom can serve as a mini stage.
Donald Trump will not be held accountable before the 2024 presidential election for his violent attempt to overturn the previous election, but he is now a convicted felon all the same.
Donald Trump is the first president in U.S. history to be convicted in a court of law.
Residents of a tiny Panamanian island threatened by rising sea levels begin to relocate to a new development.
In a Violent Nature might seem like a purely aesthetic exercise. But its experimentation elevates an all-too-familiar genre.
A new book earnestly wrestles with what it means to bring a person into the world.
Food storage is way more confusing than it ought to be.
The university will no longer make statements about political matters. Other schools should follow suit.
Being understood yourself starts with taking the trouble to understand others.
Population growth, economic growth, and income growth can be mutually reinforcing.
What happens when a famous drag queen travels to states that have tried to ban drag?
Many advocates wrongly presume that gloom and doom is the only way to motivate change.
Publishers including The Atlantic are signing deals with the AI giant. Where does this lead?
Outside the courtroom, the former president is showing voters who he really is.
Making sense of the most consequential independent presidential run in decades
Disguising vegetables inside other foods might be the worst way to get a toddler to eat them.
Headshot upends the classic story of the underdog by turning each of its characters into one.
The climate phenomenon should cool the world. But first, we have to make it through another sweltering summer.
Lobbying firms have disguised their influence so well that it’s often barely visible even to savvy Washington insiders.
The state recently reclassified abortion pills as controlled dangerous substances.