- Trump, Zelenskyy have ‘productive’ call after massive Russian barrage on Kyiv
- Will Israeli success in Iran pave way to Gaza ceasefire?
- Facing blistering heat, the French ponder the unthinkable: Air conditioning
- South Lebanon Shia Muslims seek solace in community mourning
- To deter more US bombs, will Iran dash for a nuclear weapon?
- A girls’ cricket team in India is bowling toward a big dream
- As ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ opens, detention centers quietly expand across the US
- How Medicaid cuts may endanger US progress battling opioid addiction
- Thailand has had 22 coups – and could be heading toward a 23rd
- Land mine ban was a global triumph. Here’s why Finland is leaving.
- Unauthorized Haitians build the Dominican Republic. Can they stay?
- His USAID career over, one worker wonders if he can still serve his country
- Zohran Mamdani upended New York politics. Is a Democratic tea party next?
- Republican challenge: ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ has big costs, provides few new benefits
- Supreme Court allowed cities to ban camping. Here’s what happened next in California.
- As ‘Alligator Alcatraz’ opens, detention centers quietly expand across the US
- His USAID career over, one worker wonders if he can still serve his country
- Facing blistering heat, the French ponder the unthinkable: Air conditioning
- Special ProjectRebuilding trust
Can trust bring connection and hope to help us find common ground in a divided world? Without trust, suspicion begets friction, division, and immobility. Today, too many realms are seeing trust deficits grow: between citizens, across racial lines, in government. This special project explores through global news stories how polarized parties are navigating times of mistrust and how we can learn to build trust in each other.
- Special SeriesThe Climate Generation: Born into crisis, building solutions
Climate change is shaping a mindset revolution—powerfully driving innovation and progress. And young people are leading the transformation. This special series focuses on the roles of those born since 1989, when recognition of children's rights and the spike of global temperatures began to intersect. The stories include vivid Monitor photography, and are written from Indigenous Northern Canada, Bangladesh, Namibia, Barbados, and the United States.
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