
Most Recent from YES! Magazine
From the Current Issue
She can’t remember recipes, and food doesn’t taste the same, but Paula Wolfert believes that what she eats is key to helping her slow her cognitive decline.
Time has run out to convince colonized newsrooms that Indigenous issues and perspectives are necessary to the national narrative.
White Americans need immigrants and diversity. That’s not do-gooder talk. It’s math.
Since 2010, the Unist’ot’en have fought the transit of fossil fuels through their hereditary lands. In the last few days, police finally moved in. Here’s how we got to this point.
A program that doubles the spending power for food stamp recipients who buy fresh produce just got more funding.

Let’s Talk About Migrant Caravans
Uneasy about discussing the migrant caravan—and its related issues like immigration, the wall, family separation, and xenophobia—with your students? Here are some resources to start the conversation.Here’s where to find a safe space for queer and trans people to get fit or stay healthy.
Black women have been poorly represented in the mainstream. So a new yearlong fellowship prepares women to redefine the stories that are being told and control who gets to tell them.
This peer-to-peer lender left big finance behind to invest in community.

12 Photos: What Hope Looks Like for Refugee Camps at the U.S. Border
The caravan movement is sustained by self-organized migrants and the volunteers who stand with them. It’s an organized, mobilized hope.Threats of global catastrophe won’t move people to action. Only the heart can inspire zeal.

How Do 2,800 Migrant Children in Detention Spend the Holidays?
Activists camped outside a sprawling tent city in the Texas desert bring a message to migrant children detained there: No estás solo. You are not alone.