The Trump Administration Aims to Penalize Disabled Adults Who Live With Their Families

A rule change pushed by White House officials would slash benefits or end support for as many as 400,000 Supplemental Security Income recipients with Down syndrome, dementia and other disabilities whose parents or relatives receive SNAP benefits.

He Died in a Florida Jail. The Company in Charge Should Have Sent Him to the Hospital, Experts Say.

Most of the state’s jails have stopped contracting with Armor Health companies, which have been sued repeatedly for subpar care. Only one jail, where Brian Tracey died, still uses a company affiliated with Armor.

China’s Overcapacity Problem Is Europe’s Problem Too — But Not in the Way You Might Think

As Beijing acknowledges its own overcapacity problem, new research reveals a more complex and more enduring threat to European manufacturing.

He’s the only lead tester in this contaminated neighborhood. He graduates next month.

The lack of inexpensive and comprehensive toxics testing has created a fragile public safety net in polluted towns across the country.

This Supreme Court ‘victory’ for oil giants is not what it seems

A recent ruling puts $745 million to restore Louisiana's coastline in doubt. But the effort to get Chevron to pay is far from over.

Who Decided to Indict Kilmar Abrego Garcia Over a Years-Old Traffic Stop?

A DOJ prosecutor insists he charged Abrego based strictly on evidence of human smuggling. A federal judge seems skeptical.

Latin America’s Anti-Women Movement Is Spreading

Chile's president José Antonio Kast is following the regressive examples set elsewhere in the region.

The U. S. Shouldn’t Rule the Seas Forever

Why the United States can no longer guarantee freedom of navigation—and why it doesn’t need to.