Mexico’s next president – and AMLO’s legacy Heather Sullivan - May 30, 2024 The June 2 elections will determine Mexico’s future course on several important issues.
Ukraine accused Russia of torture. Here’s how to prosecute those crimes. Alyson Reynolds, Elijah Tsai, and Kelebogile Zvobgo - November 22, 2022 Ukraine’s allies can use their own courts to investigate war crimes
Latinos who use Spanish-language social media get more misinformation Marisa A. Abrajano, Marianna Garcia, Aaron Pope, Robert Vidigal, Joshua Tucker, and Jonathan Nagler - November 7, 2022 That could affect their votes – and their health.
Latino leaders could collaborate with Black communities. Why don’t they? Claudia Sandoval and Chaya Crowder - October 13, 2022 The two groups have different views on whether racism is systemic or not, our research finds. It wasn’t always this way.
Will misinformation keep Latinos from voting in the midterms? Yamil Ricardo Velez - September 29, 2022 That depends in part on where they get their news. Here’s what my research found.
Italy’s new leader faces familiar problems, including fickle voters Mark Gilbert - September 27, 2022 Giorgia Meloni’s popularity may not hold — and she doesn’t have much freedom to change policy
Nannie Helen Burroughs, trailblazing Black teacher and labor organizer Danielle Phillips-Cunningham - August 31, 2022 During Jim Crow, she forged career paths for Black girls.
A German word for how others see Germany’s gas crisis: Schadenfreude Matthias Matthijs - July 26, 2022 If Germany had been nicer to Mediterranean countries when they needed help, they might be nicer now in return.
How the U.S. census ignores Afro-Latinos Michelle Bueno Vásquez - June 2, 2022 Afro-Latinos are the most vulnerable to discrimination, but their official invisibility makes them harder to serve
Biden called Putin a ‘war criminal.’ That’s risky. Daniel Krcmaric and Alexander Downes - March 24, 2022 Here’s the downside to prosecuting former leaders