Slate Magazine InvestigationImmigration Consider the Cable Guy Your cable installer used to be employed by Comcast or Time Warner. Now he’s joined the 1099 economy — and an app schedules every moment of his day. Virginia Sole-SmithSlate MagazineApril 15, 2016 InvestigationJustice Roe v. Wade Was Lost in 1992 How “undue burden” — a concept nurtured by anti-abortion groups and championed by the first woman on the Supreme Court — has eroded the right to choose. Meaghan WinterSlate MagazineMarch 28, 2016 InvestigationImmigration Spring Break’s Cleanup Crew It’s the worst time to be a hotel housekeeper in Miami. The rest of the year’s pretty bad, too. Michelle ChenSlate MagazineMarch 25, 2016 InvestigationBusiness, Labor I Was a Super Bowl Concession Worker What it’s like making less than $13 an hour to serve $13 beers at one of the biggest games on Earth. Gabriel ThompsonSlate MagazineFebruary 9, 2016 InvestigationHealth, Labor Stretched Thin Personal trainers are frequently overworked, undertrained, and underpaid by their gyms. James HannahamSlate MagazineJanuary 6, 2016 InvestigationJustice, Politics America’s Unfair Rules of the Road How our federally subsidized transportation system discriminates against the most vulnerable. Corinne RameySlate MagazineFebruary 27, 2015 InvestigationPolitics Office Politics Inside the PAC teaching corporate America how to make its employees vote for the right candidates and causes. Spencer WoodmanSlate MagazineOctober 16, 2014 InvestigationPolitics CPAC Isn’t As Grassroots As You Think The American Conservative Union’s annual shindig takes big sums from the gun, oil, and cigarette industries. Eli CliftonSlate MagazineMarch 10, 2014 InvestigationJustice Hana’s Story Hana Williams left her Ethiopian orphanage for a new life in the United States. But after three years of abuse and neglect by her adoptive parents, she was dead. Kathryn JoyceSlate MagazineNovember 11, 2013 InvestigationBusiness Georgia’s Hunger Games Fewer than 4,000 adults in the southern state receive welfare, even as poverty is soaring. How Georgia declared war on its poorest citizens. Neil deMauseSlate MagazineDecember 26, 2012 1 2 3
InvestigationImmigration Consider the Cable Guy Your cable installer used to be employed by Comcast or Time Warner. Now he’s joined the 1099 economy — and an app schedules every moment of his day. Virginia Sole-SmithSlate MagazineApril 15, 2016
InvestigationJustice Roe v. Wade Was Lost in 1992 How “undue burden” — a concept nurtured by anti-abortion groups and championed by the first woman on the Supreme Court — has eroded the right to choose. Meaghan WinterSlate MagazineMarch 28, 2016
InvestigationImmigration Spring Break’s Cleanup Crew It’s the worst time to be a hotel housekeeper in Miami. The rest of the year’s pretty bad, too. Michelle ChenSlate MagazineMarch 25, 2016
InvestigationBusiness, Labor I Was a Super Bowl Concession Worker What it’s like making less than $13 an hour to serve $13 beers at one of the biggest games on Earth. Gabriel ThompsonSlate MagazineFebruary 9, 2016
InvestigationHealth, Labor Stretched Thin Personal trainers are frequently overworked, undertrained, and underpaid by their gyms. James HannahamSlate MagazineJanuary 6, 2016
InvestigationJustice, Politics America’s Unfair Rules of the Road How our federally subsidized transportation system discriminates against the most vulnerable. Corinne RameySlate MagazineFebruary 27, 2015
InvestigationPolitics Office Politics Inside the PAC teaching corporate America how to make its employees vote for the right candidates and causes. Spencer WoodmanSlate MagazineOctober 16, 2014
InvestigationPolitics CPAC Isn’t As Grassroots As You Think The American Conservative Union’s annual shindig takes big sums from the gun, oil, and cigarette industries. Eli CliftonSlate MagazineMarch 10, 2014
InvestigationJustice Hana’s Story Hana Williams left her Ethiopian orphanage for a new life in the United States. But after three years of abuse and neglect by her adoptive parents, she was dead. Kathryn JoyceSlate MagazineNovember 11, 2013
InvestigationBusiness Georgia’s Hunger Games Fewer than 4,000 adults in the southern state receive welfare, even as poverty is soaring. How Georgia declared war on its poorest citizens. Neil deMauseSlate MagazineDecember 26, 2012