People who protested the detainment of three Colombian asylum-seekers in Durango continue to voice outrage, disbelief, and disappointment at how they were treated by Immigration and Customs ...
The protest is happening outside of the ICE field office in Durango after a man and his two children were detained Monday ...
Fasher, in Darfur, to the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces. Now warnings are mounting of a second genocide as mass killings ...
Utah’s Supreme Court has upheld a decision blocking a proposal to pipe Green River water from Utah to Colorado’s Front Range — a controversial project that’s been in the works for more than a decade.
Gender inequality is accelerating young Japanese women's flight from rural areas to the cities, further depressing the country's already low birthrate.
The meeting comes amid growing tensions over trade between the U.S. and China. NPR White House correspondent Deepa Shivaram is traveling with Trump in Asia and brings us this report. DEEPA SHIVARAM, ...
Amazon is laying off 14,000 workers -- about 4 percent of its workforce. This is part of a larger trend by American companies. They're betting that they can grow without growing their workforces.
Since Trump's election, gun groups catering to progressives and people of color report a surge in interest as they look to defend themselves in a country that, to them, feels increasingly unstable.
Hurricane Melissa has made landfall in Jamaica as the strongest storm in the island's history, leaving widespread destruction in its wake.
Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, who’s running for governor in 2026, says he supports a push to redraw the state’s ...
Fontenot, CEO of Feeding America, about the looming expiration of federal food assistance and what it means for food banks across the country.
Schools are grappling with how to prepare students for the possibility of gun violence without traumatizing them.