InvestigationBusiness, Immigration, Labor Dark Meat Work more days. Carve more turkeys. Don’t get hurt. What poultry workers endure in the frenzied weeks before Thanksgiving. Gabriel ThompsonSlate MagazineNovember 21, 2016
InvestigationJustice With Child The right to choose in Rapid City Kiera FeldmanHarper'sNovember 17, 2016
AnalysisTechnology What, Exactly, Is Facebook? Facebook won’t call itself a media company. Is it time to reimagine journalism for the digital age? Catherine BuniNovember 16, 2016
InvestigationJustice Incarcerated for Years Without Trial Chicago police missed more than 11,000 court dates since 2010, causing months or years of unnecessary delays for inmates awaiting trial. Spencer WoodmanChicago ReaderNovember 16, 2016
InvestigationImmigration, Labor Host of Problems What happens when au pairs encounter long hours, low pay, and abusive host families. Noy ThrupkaewRevealNovember 5, 2016
AnalysisEnvironment, Politics Big Oil and Gas Take Aim at Ballot Initiative Process in Colorado The anti-fracking movement has relied heavily on the initiative process as a tool against a powerful oil and gas industry presence in the state. Simon Davis-CohenNovember 4, 2016
InvestigationImmigration, Labor Cultural Ambassadors or Low-Wage Nannies? Au pairs come to the US through a State Department cultural exchange program. But are their labor rights protected? Noy ThrupkaewThe Washington Post MagazineNovember 3, 2016
InvestigationJustice The 20-Week Abortion Ban Bind More and more state bans mean that women who learn of unviable pregnancies face extremely limited options. Sylvia A. HarveyElleNovember 2, 2016
ImpactImmigration, Justice ICE Plans to Reopen the Very Same Private Prison the Feds Just Closed Advocates cheered when the Justice Department began shuttering its private prisons. But immigration officials saw an opportunity. Seth Freed WesslerOctober 27, 2016
NewsJustice Study: Face Recognition Systems Threaten the Privacy of Millions Ava KofmanOctober 18, 2016