How brutal raids are sabotaging the political strategy the US claims to support in Afghanistan.
Female Engagement Teams join the counterinsurgency.
The GOP hit group is on an alarmingly successful crusade to confuse voters about the healthcare law.
In California and Arizona, the anti-immigrant radical right is using the Tea Party to recreate itself.
Is the cultural commons a viable alternative to the copyright regime, or does it risk turning culture into a consumerist slum?
The Black Minutes, a nuanced neo-noir, conveys how narco-violence has leached the Mexican justice system of meaning.
Jonathan Franzen's Freedom, Robert Darnton's Poetry and the Police, Jeremy Harding's Mother Country
The International Criminal Court has had setbacks—but it's already having an impact.
The French Parliament has passed President Sarkozy's controversial law raising the retirement age, and nationwide protests against the measure have eased. But the struggle against austerity measures is far from over.
Ginni Thomas's insistence that Anita Hill apologize is an apt metaphor for the long history of blaming black women for social ills.
A new book concludes that it was really Ethel and Julius Rosenberg's in-laws who illegally passed classified information on the atomic bomb to the Russians. Does the news still matter?
Traveling in South Africa, you learn that one great thing about the country is that no one engages in small talk.
Join bestselling authors Robert Scheer and Joe Conason for a wide-rang...