The Supreme Court Thursday blocked the Biden administration鈥檚 vaccine mandate for large employers. What happens now?
Concern over radio-spectrum crowding delayed 5G rollouts this month. But confirmation of a federal communications referee may help the process.
Amid the political rhetoric over the Capitol riot, it can be easy to lose sight of what actually happened on and after Jan. 6.
As migrants risk the English Channel to enter the U.K., relations between Paris and London have soured. A key cause is Brexit and all it has undone.
In January, California will require food waste to be recycled. Instead of going into landfills, it must be composted or made into biofuel or energy.
Facing an assertive China, some members of Congress want Washington to promise to defend Taiwan. But most experts support continued 鈥渟trategic ambiguity.鈥
Holiday air travel can always be a test of patience. That鈥檚 taking on new meaning as unprecedented unruly behavior coincides with a rebound in travel.
Here鈥檚 why the answer to today鈥檚 worrisome price spike may revolve around consumer and business mindsets, not just kinks in supply chains.
World leaders are turning their attention to super pollutants 鈥 the most potent greenhouse gases 鈥 in the latest efforts to slow global warming.
The COP26 climate summit is about voluntary steps, not mandates and penalties. But Europe is poised to add some tough love on the side. Will it help?
Diwali has been celebrated in South Asia for 2,500 years. But in recent years, the Hindu Festival of Lights has resonated more broadly.
As Americans quit jobs at a record pace, we look at the advantages of spending less time at work and how thinkers from Keynes to Nixon predicted it.
A Facebook employee secretly copied tens of thousands of pages of the company鈥檚 internal research. What do The Facebook Papers show?
Historical housing discrimination in Boston plays out today in systemic racism affecting homeownership, generational wealth, and education.
Germany鈥檚 first post-Merkel election promises to reshape the country鈥檚 governing priorities around a new, likely three-party coalition.
The NCAA鈥檚 new policy permitting college athletes to profit on their name, image, and likeness rights is a sea change in college sports.
In a post-U.S. Afghanistan, several jihadist groups are competing for influence. Who are they and what will this mean for the country and its neighbors?
An abortion decision with no oral arguments or lower court rulings? The Supreme Court is using its shadow docket for cases with potentially far-reaching implications.
Lawyers who sought to overturn the 2020 election results in key states, alleging fraud, were sanctioned last week by a federal judge in Michigan.
There are many reasons for Mexico鈥檚 high homicide rates. But one of them, the government says, is lax gun regulation in the U.S., its neighbor.
Tribal colleges and universities sustain and perpetuate Native American cultures and communities through education and nation building.
Britney Spears calls her case 鈥渁busive,鈥 and her dad agreed to step down Thursday. Critics say conservatorships facilitate elder abuse and undercut disability rights.
Will the shift in Iran from a moderate to a hard-liner as president create tensions with the West? In nuclear talks, it may create an opening.
China鈥檚 emissions trading market is a first step toward its goal of reducing carbon emissions. But it may not lead to short-term reductions.
Haiti was created by a slave revolt over 200 years ago, and the resilience of that act of hope threads through its political and economic struggles.