How the U.S. government measures race has changed substantially since censuses began in 1790. Today, Americans differ on whether the government should ask about race.
The 2023–2029 Language Policy Concept aims to expand the use of Kazakh across science, IT, media, and governance, including ...
Birhanu Degefa was visiting family in the Ethiopian city of Shire in November, when soldiers suddenly began rounding up men ...
Olga, thank you for joining me. Let’s start with you. Could you briefly introduce yourself — where you’re from, what you do, ...
Belonging to more than one marginalized group can make building and maintaining social connections significantly harder, ...
A mass train stabbing in the UK has spurred a vigorous debate about releasing the racial and nationality details of suspects ...
Vladimir Putin chaired a meeting of the Presidential Council for Interethnic Relations. First, let me go back to yesterday’s ...
Explore how Indian cinema portrays sporting women. Discover films like Mary Kom, Dangal, and Chak De India that showcase grit ...
PENANG'S Baba and Nyonya community has welcomed the government's move to officially recognise Peranakan Chinese as a separate ...
Mamdani's victory signals a shift in Indian-American voting patterns, urging broader diaspora engagement beyond partisan ...
Zohran Mamdani’s New York mayoral win channels Nehru’s democratic socialism—linking immigrant struggles, equality, and the ...
Racial categories, which have been on every U.S. census, have changed from decade to decade, reflecting the politics and science of the times.