Mortgage Meltdown: Why Our Community?
Race and Extreme Inequality
Will Obama’s presidential candidacy signal a change for impoverished African-Americans?
This Land Is Their Land
In the era of the superrich, if a place is truly beautiful, ordinary people can’t afford to be there.
Anti-War Soldier: An Interview with Jonathan Hutto
Hutto talks about the founding of the Appeal for Redress and how the GI movement during the Vietnam War paved the way for the current movement.
The Economic Side of MLK’s Dream
We’re not much closer to the promised land than we were at the time of Dr. Martin Luther King’s assassination.
Racial Confessions in a Biracial World
Being comfortably biracial means that Obama moves in even more varied racial settings, observing and hearing what many others do not.
Obama Race Speech Analysis
With his speech on race, Barack Obama has already brought about one much-needed change: people across the United States are examining our personal, systemic, and deeply entrenched racism
Change to Believe In
Forty years after the Kerner Commission report, the nation remains divided into separate and unequal societies.
Hardliners Target Detente with North Korea
The opponents of engagement with North Korea are sharpening their knives.
Violeta Draganova
Violeta Draganova
Interview with David Mura
The Japanese American writer talks with E. Ethelbert Miller about Asia, racism, and the foreign policy of Minnesota.
Meeks on Global Peace Index
The United States ranks 96th in the world in terms of peacefulness. Rep. Meeks explains why.
What’s Next for the Peace Movement?
Eleven peace activists and scholars, in responding to Lawrence Wittner’s essay, gaze into the crystal ball to envision the peace movement’s possible future.