Afghanistan: Bringing Down the House that Bush Built
This is what dismantling 10 years of war in Afghanistan looks like.
This is what dismantling 10 years of war in Afghanistan looks like.
Thirteen years after Wisconsin’s 829th Engineer Co. deployed to build Afghanistan’s war infrastructure, they’re back to tear it apart and take it home.
Two years after South African police shot at striking miners, neither Lungisile Madwantsi—nor his country—has healed.
South Sudan's hospitals have become targets for both sides in the brutal, ongoing civil war. How can you save lives when doctors and patients are living under the gun?
Renewed fighting in the war-torn country has derailed humanitarian relief efforts, and now tens of thousands are facing starvation.
As Hungary's populist right-wing government fights off its challenger from the extreme right, culture and historical memory have become the battleground.
Rising sea levels will displace millions of people over the next century. In Bangladesh, the mass migration has already begun.
In the refugee camps of Iraqi Kurdistan, the insurgents are not often what they seem.
Karachi makes headlines with spectacular terror attacks, but the city's real insecurity problems are more mundane and intractable.
The seventh in Jeffrey Stern's series of oral histories from Afghans preparing for life as US and NATO forces leave Afghanistan. With special guest contributor Moh. Sayed Madadi.
Why the surprising Philippine Supreme Court ruling on reproductive health rights is a big win for women — and a blow to the Catholic Church.
What Afghanistan's election monitors pack for the most pivotal—and dangerous—political contest since 2001.