News

NPR's Michel Martin asks former U.S. National Security Advisor John Bolton about the prospects for security guarantees in Ukraine and what they might look like.
Health departments struggle to adequately survey for ticks to warn doctors about new species and the diseases they carry.
Brain-implanted devices that allow paralyzed people to speak can also decode words they imagine, but don't intend to share.
People who buy their own health insurance are facing significant price hikes next year as federal tax credits passed by Congress during the COVID-19 pandemic are set to expire in December.
U.S. farmers are feeling the impact of Trump's immigration crackdown. In some communities, immigration raids have slowed farm operations. NPR reports from Central Florida's strawberry region.
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks to Texas state Rep. Nicole Collier, a Democrat who slept in the Texas House chamber after refusing Republicans' demand that Democrats leave only with police escort.
Six GOP governors are sending National Guard troops to assist in Trump's D.C. crime crackdown, even though crime levels in major cities in some of those states are higher than in the U.S. capital.
Sweden's 113-year-old Kiruna Church is being transported away from a location that is sinking due to underground mining.
The Trump administration is pursuing an unusual deal that would make the U.S. government a major stakeholder in chipmaker Intel. NPR unpacks the proposal with Bloomberg reporter Mackenzie Hawkins.
Fountain House is a clubhouse in Hollywood with a goal of returning its members — who all have serious mental illnesses — to full, functional lives.
Democrats have struggled to counter GOP efforts to frame itself as the party of "law and order." Some see it as a problem of ...
Nerd has been part of our lexicon for three-quarters of a century, its geeky meaning embodied by some of the most ...