Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank fighting for the right to a homeland, and for their basic right to water—which Israel continues to deny.
A bee caretaker learns just how much humans can gain from tuning in to nature’s cues.
Grappling with the fantasy and memory of flooding on California’s last remaining almond farm.
Evolving technology and place-based knowledge help a family connect with joy while far from home and one another.
A father copes with the loss of his daughter by giving back to nature, as she had wanted.
When it comes to telling the story of climate change, we need both journalism and fiction to imagine a better world.
Propelled by a discerning non-verbal child, a craft gets elevated to an act of devotion.
Displaced by climate change, Fulani children are getting access to education no one in their communities has had before.
It’s more important than ever to commit to collective practices that generate hope, love, care, and community.
A criminal record keeps many qualified candidates out of work; these coffee companies are helping clear the first hurdle.
Transgender and nonbinary people need more than policies to protect their safe access to bathrooms. They need allies.
For Women’s History Month, YES! is highlighting stories of women change-makers, freedom fighters, and innovators.
Like moths emerging from a cocoon, the spring equinox beckons us to embrace our re-imagined selves.
Amidst a rising tide of anti-LGBTQ book bans, activists, authors, and librarians are organizing to make sure LGBTQ stories are still heard.
Experts and disability justice advocates say these changes could help more California families with children who have complex medical needs access the care they‘re entitled to.
California offers a suite of programs intended to help parents access medically necessary care for their children, but enrollment is complex, time-consuming, and full of bureaucratic red tape.
After her cervical cancer diagnosis, Caitlin Breedlove sought connection and stories from other survivors, but found them few and far between.
Along with the families of other police shooting victims and the financial support of every federally recognized tribe in Washington state, the Puyallup Tribe helped pass the nation’s first police accountability bill.
Trees and edible plants are being planted at churches, schools, street corners, and empty lots across the country to provide free shade and food to all.
This investigative report uncovers questionable sourcing and a striking lack of physical or eyewitness evidence in two early reports that have been widely cited to bolster claims that Hamas committed mass sexual violence in its Oct. 7, 2023, attack on Israel.
Disability justice activists are joining grassroots efforts to shut down Atlanta’s Cop City, the largest police training campus in the U.S.
Technology has offered us more ways to connect than ever before. So why are we so isolated, lonely, and polarized?
Has the age of digital organizing come and gone?
Resisting biometric surveillance requires more than opting out.
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