Books In Review: The end of endless wars? Andrew Bacevich and Samuel Moyn each seek a reckoning on how the United States uses its military abroad. by Amy Frykholm April 20, 2022
Features QAnon moms The infiltration of online parenting spaces began as a slow burn. During the pandemic, it’s picked up speed. by Dawn Araujo-Hawkins April 19, 2022
From the Editors Three reasons gerrymandering is bad for democracy (no matter who does it) It’s not just about an overall partisan advantage. April 18, 2022
Opinion Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and the monster of Whiteness Unmasking and slaying our Promethean desire for mastery by Whitney Wilkinson Arreche April 12, 2022
Features Myanmar’s civil war has continued unabated for 60 years How could a Buddhist country have one of the worst human rights records in the world? by Chris Mabey April 11, 2022
Books In Review: How harm reduction is winning the war against drug overdoses Maia Szalavitz tells the story of a strategy that replaces criminalization with empathy. by Erica Poellot April 7, 2022
First Person I went to the first McDonald’s in Russia for the bathroom As the Soviet Union crumbled, the West sent French fries. by Amy Frykholm April 6, 2022
From the Editors What kind of faith should Ketanji Brown Jackson have? We seem to want public figures with inconsequential beliefs. April 4, 2022
Interview Common threads among five prophetic voices of the 20th century “We turn to Thurman, Bonhoeffer, Day, Heschel, and Niebuhr because they never let us forget the important questions.” Cornelius Swart interviews Martin Doblmeier March 24, 2022
Books In Review: Why was the apostle Paul in prison so often? Perhaps for the same reasons people are today. by Sarah Jobe March 23, 2022
From the Editors Guantánamo and the wages of imperialism What happens when one country believes it has the right to send troops into another country, impose its will, and abuse the rule of law? March 22, 2022
From the Editor/Publisher Florida’s “Stop WOKE Act” is about White people’s comfort When did comfort become our highest aspiration? by Peter W. Marty March 21, 2022
Features Amara Ifeji works at the intersection of climate and racial justice The Nigerian-born activist grew up in Maine playing with the dirt—and experiencing environmental racism. by Khristi Lauren Adams March 16, 2022
Books In Review: Obery Hendricks condemns the sins of right-wing evangelicalism If his book were a trial, the verdict would be clear: guilty. by Martin Thielen March 10, 2022
From the Editors The price of gas in a global economy Our dependence on fossil fuels is filling Vladimir Putin’s war chest. March 8, 2022