
As a journalist who covers human rights, I spend a lot of time absorbing trauma. This is one thing that helped me deal.

A new killing in South Africa raises the question about when it's right to intervene to try and save a life.

Less than two months after being initially discovered, the homeless man with the radio voice has been abandoned by his benefactors.

The IMF's Dominique Strauss-Kahn is in police custody in New York, but it's the people writing about him behaving criminally.

Help us get to the bottom of our wildly popular story about sodium bicarbonate.

In discussing the world's diverse population, the "paper of record" once again turns to a bunch of middle-aged white men.

Most Americans don't care about the "big" event tomorrow. Why isn't the media listening to us?

Here comes the iPhone, and there go the photojournalists.

When it comes to teaching and learning, Google+ has some pretty serious advantages over both Twitter and Facebook.

Their answers about whether their degrees are worth it might just surprise you.

See the depths to which one Chicago news station sank in order to create a compelling news story.

We need more people to care about human rights, but we can’t take shortcuts.

Now that Assange has turned himself in, what does everything mean?

A list of our favorite longform curation sites on the web.

How the need for speed in modern media constantly results in huge errors.

America's paper of record continues to overlook people of color on its "Room for Debate" page: Should we care? (Yes.)

After the L.A. riots, student paper L.A. Youth provided a critical student voice. Now it's in danger of closing.

Now that Arianna Huffington has some cash from selling her site to AOL, will she finally stop driving down the value of journalism?