NPR's Steve Inskeep talks to Gordon Sundland, a Republican donor and former ambassador to the European Union during the Trump administration, about why he's again supporting the former president.
After Hurricane Andrew decimated parts of south Florida in 1992, state officials mandated sweeping building code revisions for new construction. Those changes continue to limit damage from storms now.
China has banned transnational adoption, ending more-than three decades during which more than 160,000 children were adopted abroad. Adoptees say they have conflicted feelings about the ban.
Jennifer Koh is shaking up the long-established chamber music program at the Kennedy Center. An example of that is her collaboration with pianist-composer Missy Mazzoli.
For more than a century, the United States Postal Service has shipped baby birds through the mail. Breeders, hatcheries and customers blame postal slowdowns and delays for birds now dying in transit.
Climate change and habitat loss are driving bears into urban areas in search of food. In Boulder, Colo., people are making an effort to harvest residential fruit trees to deter visits from bears.
NPR's A Martinez talks to actor Stanley Tucci about his love of food -- and the connection between cooking, acting and directing.
Vice President Harris is racing to shore up support and turnout from Black male voters with new promises and a high-profile ...
Alt.Latino has a new story in its series, Songs That Move You. Listener Claudia Cruz is reminded about Afro-Caribbean New York City in the 1980s.
Experts say smugglers are treating migrants more harshly and bringing them on paths that could be more dangerous in extreme ...
Destroying the roads would be in line with Kim Jong Un's push to cut off ties with South Korea and abandon the decades-long ...
Canada expelled India’s top diplomat in the country and five others over last year's killing of a Sikh activist in British ...