Oregon Leaders Are Trying to Save the Deschutes River. Here’s Why That’s So Hard.

By law, one irrigation district has rights to most of the water from the Deschutes, forcing farmers to fallow their land in times of scarcity. Oregon has pushed three main solutions to deliver water more efficiently and sustainably.

An Oregon Law Lets One Wealthy Region Turn the Desert Green. When Drought Hits, Farmers Pay the Price.

In the high desert of Central Oregon, the Deschutes River is a lifeline for farmers and landowners — but a century-old water law entitles just a few thousand people to more than half of its volume.

Ask a Climate Therapist: How do I avoid getting trapped in the system I hope to change?

A young engineer has a vision for changing their industry, but worries about slowly becoming a cog in the machine. Therapist Leslie Davenport offers advice for staying creative.

30-Year Sentence for Transporting Zines Is a Five-Alarm Fire for Free Speech

Daniel Sanchez Estrada’s 30-year sentence for moving a box of pamphlets is likely just the start for criminalizing possession of information.

Trump Claimed to Run Venezuela. After Earthquakes, He’s Walking That Back.

In January, Trump said “we’re in charge” of Venezuela. Amid a humanitarian crisis, they’re merely “our new and great friends. ”

Democracy, Control, or Competitiveness: The AI Trilemma

A new papal encyclical exposes the democratic trilemma shaping how the world governs artificial intelligence.

How climate change gets under the skin

Here’s what we know, so far, about the lasting effects of climate change on the body’s vital systems.

Will Kenya’s Ruto Finally Reconcile with the Country’s Somali Minority?

The president has taken unprecedented steps to end a policy of exclusion, but suspicions remain.