News

A Peruvian farmer has lost a landmark climate case against German energy giant RWE. Saul Luciano Lliuya had argued the ...
Mariam Mohammed says her younger son died when she could not get treatment for him at a U.S.-funded clinic that had ...
The Conservative Political Action Conference held its first meeting in Poland on Tuesday, just five days before a tightly ...
One musician found that improvising — playing with others without sheet music or a conductor — helped her be fully in the moment.
Landmark climate legislation from the Biden administration would be dismantled in the budget bill that House Republicans recently passed.
A new study that details the evolutionary change of Anna’s hummingbirds found their beaks have grown longer and more tapered to get the most from common feeders.
A new partnership between United States Steel Corp. and Japan’s Nippon Steel Corp. announced last week will help keep the firm and the industry alive in America.
U.S. officials have criticized recent moves by the German government allowed under the German constitution, which the U.S. helped design.
NPR's Michel Martin talks with attorney Theodore Boutrous, who is representing NPR in a legal challenge to Trump White House plans to stop federal funding of public media.
Revered teacher and culture keeper Marian Scott passed away this spring. She's one of fewer than 100 fluent speakers of the Arapaho language and will be missed on Wyoming's Wind River Reservation.
First, their son joined ISIS. Then they learned he had children trapped in a Syrian prison camp. Getting their grandchildren home became their life's work.
What does it mean to be "half"? Twenty-five years since its initial launch, photographer Kip Fulbeck revisits his exhibition called "The Hapa Project," an intimate look at mixed-race America.