Indigenous advocates called the final agreement in Azerbaijan "drastically insufficient." Now they're focusing on next year's ...
The six-month season saw an above-average number of storms. Scientists say climate change is leading to more powerful and ...
NPR's Michel Martin speaks with pediatricians Candice Jones and Jaime Friedman, who offer tips on how to travel with little ones. (Story aired on Morning Edition on Nov. 24, 2024.) ...
In this week's StoryCorps, Philadelphia radio host Cherri Gregg remembers her grandmother, Maryhall Fuller Robinson Snead, who helped her find her voice.
The parliamentary election will decide the next government, and will show whether Ireland bucks the global trend of ...
Seventeen-year-old Sophia Park has become the youngest person to pass the California bar exam, following in her older brother's footsteps.
Scientists observed wolves in Ethiopia feeding on flower nectar. This may be the first instance of a predator serving as a pollinator.
At least five Democratic members of Congress from Connecticut were targeted by bomb threats on Thursday. Police who responded ...
Longtime state media journalist Dong Yuyu met often with journalists and diplomats. His family believes he is now being ...
A social media ban for children under 16 will be the first law in the world to levy fines on TikTok, Facebook, Snapchat, ...
NPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Emily Kwong and Jessica Yung of Short Wave about ancient evidence of hot water on Mars, indigenous people's cultivation of hazelnuts, and an inauspicious fish sighting.
Russian strikes continue to destroy Ukraine's power grid, prompting nation-wide power cuts while temperatures drop. Workers at a damaged plant try to restore its operation before the winter freeze.