An Israeli airstrike hit a mosque in central Gaza early Sunday. Israeli planes also lit up the skyline across the southern ...
Pope Francis named 21 new cardinals Sunday, significantly increasing the size of the College of Cardinals who will one day ...
There are barriers preventing many Latino farm workers in northeastern Tennessee from trying to get help, but the extended ...
New York is known for its street food vendors. NPR spent time with a recently arrived migrant who is hitting the streets to ...
We look at how the possibility of the U.S. getting drawn into a wider conflict in the Middle East could affect the presidential race, as well as how the candidates are doing in swing states.
Chestnut trees began disappearing from eastern deciduous forests in the U.S. almost a century ago due to a nasty fungus. That has contributed to a vastly different eastern forest landscape today.
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe speaks with Jerusalem Demsas of The Atlantic about where the two major presidential candidates stand on one of the most important issues facing Americans: housing costs.
Powerful new explosions rocked Beirut's southern suburbs late Saturday as Israel expanded its bombardment in Lebanon, also ...
The child tax credit passed by Congress at the height of the pandemic has expired, but states and other local jurisdictions are trying to step in to fill the gap with their own programs and funding.
It's been almost a year since Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7th. We look at how that conflict has grown.
Could this weekend's election in Tunisia sound the death knell for democracy in its third presidential election since the Arab spring?
NPR's Ayesha Rascoe asks Trevor Noah about his new book, "Into the Uncut Grass," and about finding common ground with people with different experiences.