Derek Thompson and Ezra Klein on their new book, Abundance
Ten years after Katrina, many New Orleans residents struggle to find an affordable place to live even though the city is full of vacant properties.
And four other intriguing things: Mark Penn at Microsoft, a better virtual-reality headset, feminist data, and the ghosts of Fukushima.
In an effort to fight poverty, officials in Memphis and many other American cities demolished big public housing projects. But dispersing the residents brought crime into formerly safe areas.
The country's forced relocations cause town planners to get creative.
For years, Americans couldn’t afford to buy things. Now there aren’t enough things to buy.
Environmental laws are being used to justify oil drilling in Los Angeles, single-family zoning in Minneapolis, and the construction of the border wall.
A small camp in Calais, France, housing nearly 8,000 migrants hoping to cross into England, is being evacuated and torn down in what French authorities are calling a “humanitarian” operation.
Almost half of young people "living with their parents" are in college, where all campus housing counts as "living with their parents," according to the Census.