Addressing domestic violence solely through the criminal justice system often doesn’t fix the problem or promote healing, and may actually cause additional harm. More holistic, trauma-informed approaches can give people a chance to process the deeper reasons for their behavior and allow them an opportunity to change.
Getting involved with climate action can be a source of hope and inspiration.
In the wake of the Buffalo massacre, scholar-activist Rosa Clemente worries that communities of color will be more heavily policed while White supremacists will continue to access guns freely.
Despite what capitalism has taught us, pleasure is neither a commodity nor a reward. It’s a foundational human need.
This issue is dedicated to exploring pleasure as it connects to our efforts to change the world, and, hopefully, get free in the process.
Everyone has the right to pleasure. But without disability justice, pleasure is a privilege.
What does it mean to give ourselves permission to experience joy even when grief and rage are present?
The pursuit of pleasure in our modern capitalist society is inextricably linked to money.
Matchmakers aren’t just for romantic relationships. Here’s how you can formally arrange your friendships.
A sensible drug policy would address the reasons many of us use drugs in the first place: We enjoy them.
Black kink is about pleasure first and foremost. But it’s also bound up with freedom and empowerment.
Today’s hustle culture claims “unearned” pleasure is shameful. But there are ways to resist this cultural response.
In our modern world, conifers and evergreens are used for a spectrum of staples ranging from homesteads to holiday decor, though we rarely stop to recognize the Tree People who provide us these essentials.
On the resilience of forests.
Trials are far from impartial if the defendant is poor or reliant on public defenders. These people are working to re-balance the scales of justice.
Number of United Nations members that have failed to ratify the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities: 14 (including the United States) Member states that have failed to
Can learning labor history give us hope for the future of unions?
Bill McKibben has been a leading advocate for climate change action since he wrote the first popular book about global warming in 1989. In his new memoir, “The Flag, The Cross and the Station Wagon,” he connects the climate crisis to his suburban American boyhood and wonders “What the hell happened?”
“The Vanishing Half” deals with the theme of racial “passing” in the 1950s. Passing is different today, but still presents a choice between safety and authenticity.
Play the puzzle from our “Pleasure” issue.
Every issue of YES! is created not only to inform, but also to inspire, to encourage, and to motivate. The sections are designed to share personal, communal, and societal approaches to being
adrienne maree brown is the writer-in-residence at the Emergent Strategy Ideation Institute, and a prolific author whose latest works include the novella Grievers, and Holding Change: The Way of Emergent
The Spring 2022 “Personal Journeys” issue of YES! Magazine. Our Spring “Personal Journeys” issue was a different one for YES! It focused on people’s personal stories of healing and transformation,
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