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NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Jean-Martin Bauer Director of Food Security and Nutrition at the World Food Programme about the famine declaration in Gaza.
After Hurricane Katrina flooded St. Bernard Parish near New Orleans in 2005, residents had to decide whether they would return and rebuild. Twenty years later, about half of the residents chose to ...
Famine has been officially declared in northern Gaza, a U.N.-backed group of experts warns — marking the first such ...
An announcement of famine — as has now happened regarding Gaza — is a complicated decision. Here's what must be considered ...
The Trump administration says it has arrested more than 700 people in Washington, DC as part of its mission to crack down on crime. Data given to NPR by the city's police department indicates a ...
The case of Abrego Garcia, a Maryland man originally from El Salvador, raised basic questions of due process in Trump's ...
The search of the home and office of former President Trump national security adviser and frequent critic John Bolton raises questions about how the administration is using law enforcement.
A federal EV tax credit worth up to $7,500 ends Sept. 30. But the IRS has just clarified that shoppers don't need to actually ...
One hundred schools were put into a state-run district, and within a decade, the state closed all of them, replacing them ...
President Trump visited police officers and National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., where their presence in the nation's capital is inciting strong reactions from city residents.
The major parties' redistricting battle escalated this week, with lawmakers in the country's two most populous states each taking a notable step toward a new congressional map.
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