Women
fromtime.com
5 months agoHow We Chose the 2025 Women of the Year
Women face significant challenges globally, yet many are taking remarkable actions for change.
Despite some stigma remaining, compassion for drug addiction has increased significantly; 66% of people still avoid those dependent on drugs, down from 71% in 2000.
Huston Smith discusses the family as a vital institution during Cold War tensions and technological change, interviewing Margaret Mead and Bertram Beck for their insights.
Students and faculty banded together to call on the federal government to account for revoking thousands of university community members' visas, largely for their participation in pro-Palestinian protests.
The urgent work of survival often edges out space for strategic visioning, but if nonprofits and activists are to thrive, they must dream different ways of living.
The lessons that she has to offer are really interesting for our audience because she's talking about, first, how to see yourself as a leader, how to know that I see something, I'm angry about it, I think it needs to change. What am I going to do about it?
As is the case with many strange odysseys, this all started during tax season. After using an accountant for my entire adult life, this year I let myself be convinced that, given that I have one job and negligible freelance income, I was overpaying for bespoke service when TurboTax would suffice.
A new generation of Michigan entrepreneurs refuses to choose between making money and making a difference. These social enterprises embed charitable missions into business models.
The Oakland History Center at the Oakland Public Library will host professor and historian Caitlin Keliiaa to discuss her book, Refusing Settler Domesticity, analyzing Native American lives in the 1910s and 1920s.
In the past, child mortality shaped lives profoundly, forcing people to cope with grief from an early age, fostering compassion for the grieving later in life.
Paul Rice, CEO of Fair Trade USA, emphasizes that consumers have power through their purchasing choices, especially in the context of rising tariffs and food prices.
Appelbaum explains why progressives are the ones standing in the way of reviving American mobility and restoring the American dream.
The responses indicate a generational disillusionment with traditional political structures, suggesting a growing frustration with the inefficiencies of democracy and a yearning for change.