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The New Republic
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The New Republic
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Photography
March 3, 2020
Kira Golikova
Life in China During the Coronavirus Lockdown
Scenes from Zhengzhou, where people’s movements were restricted to contain the virus
January 7, 2020
Jordan G. Teicher
,
Bil Zelman
An Animal’s-Eye View of Mass Extinction in Progress
Bil Zelman's photos confront viewers with the unvarnished, immediate reality of climate and habitat disruption.
November 13, 2019
David Roth
The Vainglorious Eternals Go Golfing
What a 2008 photo tells us about American political life in 2019
October 15, 2019
Caleb Gayle
Inside the “Most Incarcerated” Zip Code in the Country
53206, a heavily African American neighborhood north of downtown Milwaukee, suffers from all manner of ills—not least of which are the myths of criminality that continue to surround it.
October 4, 2019
Tarisai Ngangura
,
Patrícia Monteiro
“The Whole Town Is Finished”
Multinational mining giant Vale S.A.'s dam near the Brazilian town of Brumadinho broke in January, flooding the area with toxic mudslides. These are the stories of those who survived.
September 18, 2019
Joshua Hunt
We Didn’t Stand a Chance Against Opioids
Alaska’s health clinics were founded to help indigenous people like my family. Thanks to the FDA and Big Pharma, the clinics unwittingly enabled a crisis instead.
August 28, 2019
Emily Atkin
,
Ben Depp
The Frightening Spread of Toxic Algae
Climate change is accelerating the spread of lethal algal blooms in American waterways—with devastating results for humans and animals alike.
August 21, 2019
Magazine
Brian Goldstone
The New American Homeless
Housing insecurity in the nation’s richest cities is far worse than government statistics claim. Just ask the Goodmans.
August 6, 2019
Emily Atkin
,
Tomaso Clavarino
The New Ruins of the Melting Alps
Climate change has left a graveyard of abandoned ski resorts on the Italian Alps—and a dwindling population of gravekeepers.
June 13, 2019
Madeleine Wattenbarger
Asylum Seekers Struggle to Navigate Trump’s Broken Border Policy
In Tijuana, thousands face danger, disease, and uncertainty under the administration’s Migrant Protection Protocols.
May 28, 2019
Magazine
Ted Genoways
River of No Return
How austerity and climate change put northeastern Nebraska underwater
May 8, 2019
Jo Livingstone
Going Under at the Playboy Club
It's been a half-century since Gloria Steinem exposed the outrageous working conditions at Hugh Hefner's club. Playboy has changed—but have we?
March 21, 2019
Alex Pareene
,
Jay Mather
Mitch McConnell, Young and . . . Moderate?
A blast from a now-unimaginable past
December 25, 2018
Emily Atkin
‘We Have to Show People What’s Going On’
Climate change is making weather more extreme, and these two veteran photojournalists were on the frontlines in 2018.
April 19, 2018
Magazine
Chris Abani
,
Sanlé Sory
The Postcolonial Moment
Capturing a lost era in Sanlé Sory’s studio portraits in Burkina Faso
February 22, 2018
Irene Hsu
,
Sharon Zhang
Photos: The Parkland Survivors Take a Stand
High school students became anti-gun activists overnight after last week's shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida.
January 26, 2018
Eric Armstrong
Acclaimed Iranian photographer Tahmineh Monzavi takes over TNR’s Instagram.
January 3, 2018
Magazine
Dina Nayeri
,
Simone Tramonte
Small Acts of Subversion
How modern women navigate Iran’s theocracy
January 2, 2018
Magazine
Laura Reston
,
Thomas Dworzak
,
Robert Capa
Everyday Soviet Nostalgia
John Steinbeck and Robert Capa's 1947 trip through Eastern Europe introduced America to Soviet life. Last year, two journalists retraced their steps.
November 22, 2017
Magazine
Laura Reston
,
James Whitlow Delano
Capital Offenses
Under President Rodrigo Duterte, thousands have died at the hands of police or the masked vigilantes who roam Manila's vast slums.
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