While we debate abortion, women are dying in childbirth.
These farmworkers created an organic co-op that guarantees fair wages and healthy working conditions while preserving indigenous heritage.
On the anniversary of the March on Washington, we revisit an interview with the musician and civil rights activist about his anthology of Black music.
With self-directed education, students become their own teachers. But the biggest learning curve may be for parents.
Returning to culture is a duty my grandfather believed Native elders had to their communities. He passed this on to me, along with his trauma.
This outdated, gender-specific, and illogical phrase is disrespectful and avoids the real issue.
More and more people are looking beyond the ordinary for ways of building that express their creativity and values.
A new book digs into the paradoxes of American Indian diets most people don’t know.
Barbers in the South are training as first responders to assist the men in their chairs with their mental health concerns.
To protect our democracy, Congress must value the Constitution over partisan politics.
From action-oriented toolkits to talk therapy and meditation, these responses facilitate recovery, hope, and activism.
The unconventional children’s television pioneer celebrated dignity and kindness in the age of mass media.
Entrepreneurs have limited access to capital and business education on the reservation. A Navajo incubator wants to change that.
My beautiful older sister, Bess — a smart, passionate, popular soccer star — killed herself when she was 17. She took my parents’ gun, drove to a park, and shot herself in the head. The effect on my family was profound. Though I’m generally a warm person, for the next 15 years, I avoided people with big emotions, or people who seemed fragile. For me, they were dangerous, unpredictable, unhelpable. I didn’t want to get too close, for fear of being responsible for them in some way. I limited my range of empathy because I was sure if I went too far, I’d be swallowed whole.
Our mental and physical well-being suffer from the sonic overload of modern life.
A growing number of communities have implemented municipal identification programs, and not just in politically progressive areas.
A mostly female crew constructs a village of emergency shelters in north Seattle, and finds camaraderie along the way.
The legendary singer’s voice came to represent the emotion, frustration, and strength of the civil rights era.
A review of the documentary “The Food Cure,” which follows patients undergoing an intensive and controversial nutritional therapy.
We are paying for this myth we’ve bought into with our lives.
An African American law enforcement expert finds hope in the firing of a racist police chief.
An encampment of protesters in Louisiana is resisting the crude oil industry, whose environmental disasters disproportionately affect the poor and people of color.
Why are anxiety and depression on the rise? Our environments have changed. Our food. Our stress. Our relationships—our “lost connections.”
Students in these communities are disproportionately affected by trauma. When they act out, adults with training ask, “Is there anything I can do to help you?” rather than “Why are you acting this way?”
A climate scientist talks to a psychologist about coping with the crushing stress related to climate change. Here’s what he learned.
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