Science

The Atlantic
The Plan to End Europe
Why does Donald Trump want to undo the post–World War II order?
8 min |
May 2017

The Atlantic
Jet-Age Chic
Eero Saarinen’s soaring TWA terminal was an icon of mid-century cool. Now it’s being reincarnated as an airport hotel.
4 min |
May 2017

The Atlantic
Apps for Refugees
How technology helps in a humanitarian crisis
5 min |
May 2017

The Atlantic
How Late-Night Comedy Fueled the Rise of Trump
A MONTH AFTER the election, Trevor Noah, the host of The Daily Show, published an op-ed in The New York Times that sought to position himself and his show as instruments of healing in a broken land.
10 min |
May 2017

The Atlantic
Mexico's Revenge
By antagonizing the U.S.’s neighbor to the south, Donald Trump has made the classic bully’s error: He has underestimated his victim. On issues ranging from counterterrorism to China, the Mexican response could be devastating.
10+ min |
May 2017

The Atlantic
Conservatism Without Bigotry
Republicans must reckon with their policies’ racial effects. That would be more likely if liberals stopped carelessly crying racist.
10+ min |
December 2017

The Atlantic
Can Unions Stop The Far Right?
If it weren’t for working-class voters, Germany’s recent election could have been a lot worse.
8 min |
December 2017

The Atlantic
The Odyssey And The Other
What the epic can teach about encounters with strangers abroad and at home
9 min |
December 2017

The Atlantic
What Happens When Robots Take Our Jobs?
For centuries, experts have predicated that machines would soon make workers obsolete. What if they weren't wrong, but only premature? An exploration of what society without jobs look like - and how we can prepare.
10+ min |
July - August 2015

The Atlantic
What Becomes Of Babies Born To Mothers Behind Bars?
What becomes of babies born to mothers behind bars? Research suggests that having nurseries in prisons leads to lower recidivism rates among incarcerated mothers and better outcomes for their children.
10+ min |
July - August 2015

The Atlantic
Hunted By The Mob
The Italian investigative journalist Roberto Saviano, in exile in New York City.
7 min |
July - August 2015

The Atlantic
Havana On The Brink
City officials are striking a difficult balance between preserving the historic district as a residential neighborhood and reviving its tourist industry. What happens when the Americans arrive?
2 min |
September 2015

The Atlantic
The Mayor of New Orleans Takes On The City's Murder Problem
Since 1980, more than 260,000 black men have been killed in America - nearly five times more Americans than died in the Vietnam War. Mitch Landrieu, the mayor of New Orleans, is on a crusade to stop the killing and break the cycle of violence.
10+ min |
September 2015

The Atlantic
The Test-Tube Chef
Herv This, the father of molecular gastronomy, thinks the meals of the future should be constructed from chemical compounds.
8 min |
September 2015

The Atlantic
Why I Put My Wife's Career First
Most mothers cannot do more. Greater numbers of fathers must take on primary parenting roles - as I have. The well-being of children, the status of women, and the happiness of men all depend on it.
10+ min |
October 2015

The Atlantic
Our Fragile Constitution
Misreading history, the Founders established a fundamentally flawed system of government. America's best hope may be to have less faith in it.
7 min |
October 2015

The Atlantic
The Anti-Redskin
In the fight over the team's name, Ray Halbritter is an adversary unlike any the NFL has faced before.
9 min |
October 2015

The Atlantic
Why Some Doctors Are Prescribing More Time Outdoors
Why some doctors are writing prescriptions for time outdoors.
7 min |
October 2015

The Atlantic
The Black Family in the Age of Mass Incarceration: Part I-II
After decades of mass incarceration that have left the United States with the largest incarcerated population in the world, politicians of all stripes are suddenly declaring the policy a mistake. But their pronouncements have failed to reckon with the phenomenon's deep historical roots, or with the damage it has done to black families. Fifty years after Daniel Patrick Moynihan's report on "The Negro Family"tragically helped launch this assault, it's time to reclaim his original intent.
10+ min |
October 2015

The Atlantic
Bill Gates - "We Need An Energy Miracle"
Bill Gates has committed his intellect, his influence, and his personal fortune to propelling the world beyond fossil fuels fast enough to outrace potentially cataclysmic climate change.
10+ min |
November 2015

The Atlantic
The Investment Secrets Of Al Gore
Al Gore has in mind nothing less than a new version of capitalism - one that reduces environmental and social damage, while still rewarding investors. The record of his 10-year-old firm, Generation Investment Management, suggests he may be onto something.
10+ min |
November 2015

The Atlantic
The Front-Runner Fallacy
Early presidential polls have tended to be wildly off-target. There’s no reason to think this time is different.
8 min |
December 2015

The Atlantic
The Return of Electroshock Therapy
Can Sarah Lisanby help electroconvulsive therapy - the most effective treatment for severe depression - shed its brutal reputation?
8 min |
December 2015

The Atlantic
6 Ways We'll Find Enough Water For A Warming Planet
How we'll find enough water for a warming planet.
6 min |
December 2015

The Atlantic
The Greatest Actor Alive
The long, rich career of Max von Sydow, coming to you soon in Star Wars and Game of Thrones.
9 min |
December 2015

The Atlantic
The Silicon Valley Suicides
Why are so many kids with bright prospects killing themselves in Palo Alto?
10+ min |
December 2015

The Atlantic
A Plutocrat's Case for Raising the Minimum Wage
Can the venture capitalist Nick Hanauer convince rich people that it’s in their interest to raise the minimum wage?
8 min |
January 2016

The Atlantic
What Was Volkswagen Thinking?
On the origins of corporate evil - and idiocy.
8 min |
January 2016

The Atlantic
Why America Is Moving Left
Republicans have a lock on Congress and the nation’s statehouses for the foreseeable future, and they may add the presidency in this year’s election. But against this political backdrop, the liberal era ushered in by Barack Obama is only just beginning.
10+ min |
January 2016

The Atlantic
The Long History of Leading From Behind
Nixon and Kissinger’s effort to fix an overextended foreign policy was more like Obama’s than you might think.
10+ min |