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3 European nations break with U.S. and formally recognize an independent Palestine
WLRN Miami· 7 hours agoNPR's Leila Fadel talks to White House National Security Communications Adviser John Kirby about the countries recognizing Palestinian statehood. The U.S. has said it wants a two-state solution.
UC Santa Cruz workers strike in solidarity with pro-Palestinian protesters
KTEP 88.5 El Paso· 11 hours agoNPR's A Martinez talks to PK Hattis of the Santa Cruz Sentinel about academic workers at UC Santa Cruz, who are striking in solidarity with pro-Palestinian protestors.
Kenyan-led forces will arrive in Haiti to help combat gang violence
WLRN Miami· 11 hours agoNPR's Leila Fadel speaks with William O'Neill, the United Nations independent expert on Human Rights in Haiti, about the Kenyan-led multinational force deploying to Haiti to help restore order there.
What do border politics look like along the U.S.-Mexico border?
KTEP 88.5 El Paso· 9 hours agoNPR's Steve Inskeep speaks with two members of a political family in Nogales, Ariz., whose lives and careers have been shaped by immigration policy.
Amid a crumbling media landscape in India, journalist Ravish Kumar is resolute
WUNC Chapel Hill· 22 hours agoNPR's Ailsa Chang talks with filmmaker Vinay Shukla and journalist Ravish Kumar about the new documentary While We Watched.
Horror icon Stephen King doubts it's possible to 'gross out' the American public
NPR· 19 hours agoNPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with author Stephen King about his new collections of short stories, You Like It Darker.
Billions from Russia's frozen assets will go to help Ukraine's military, the EU says
NPR· 1 hour agoSince the war began, the EU, Group of Seven and other U.S. allies have immobilized some $282 billion...
NPR chief works to clean up public image with extra editorial review, meeting with GOP senator
Fox News via Yahoo News· 6 days agoNPR's CEO met with a Republican senator the same day NPR rolled out a new editorial layer at the...
A long drought in Zambia has left people with no crops or money for food
WUNC Chapel Hill· 22 hours agoNPR's Ari Shapiro talks with Cindy MCcain, executive director of the World Food Programme, about her current trip to Zambia, where people are enduring a severe drought and going hungry.
'The Riot Report' looks back on the violence in the U.S. during the summer of 1967
WLRN Miami· 1 day agoNPR's Michel Martin talks to Jelani Cobb about the race riots of 1967 and political unrest today. He co-produced a documentary for the American Experience series airing on PBS.