Ailsa Chang speaks with April Dembosky with KQED in San Francisco and Amelia Templeton with Oregon Public Broadcasting about how the conversation about involuntary commitment is playing out in California and Oregon.
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Tulsa Family Lawyer and Mediator
Ailsa Chang speaks with April Dembosky with KQED in San Francisco and Amelia Templeton with Oregon Public Broadcasting about how the conversation about involuntary commitment is playing out in California and Oregon.
Email us at [email protected].
Bangladesh is prone to flooding from rising sea levels and melting glaciers. And it is in the path of some of the world’s most powerful cyclones.
NPR’s Lauren Frayer reports from northern Bangladesh on how the country is becoming a hot spot for climate solutions.
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The task force has to answer thorny questions like who should qualify for reparations, how to measure the suffering that Black people have endured and how to attach a dollar figure to that suffering.
The chair of the task force, Kamilah Moore, says she hopes the panel’s work will make a real difference in the lives of millions of Black Californians and serve as a model for a national program.
NPR’s Jennifer Ludden reports on one big obstacle to a federal reparations package: public opinion is firmly against it. That’s especially true among white Americans.
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The New York investigation into hush money paid to adult entertainment actor Stormy Daniels is just one of several criminal probes currently faced by Donald Trump, And it’s the one that is closest to issuing charges.
Amid all the legal drama Trump has announced his third bid for the White House. A pending indictment would usually be a golden opportunity for Trump’s Republican challengers – some who have declared – like Nikki Haley – and those who are expected to jump in the race – like Mike Pence and Ron DeSantis.
But for the field of Republican presidential candidates, taking Trump down while not alienating his base is risky business.
Host Scott Detrow talks to NPR congressional correspondent Kelsey Snell. He also talks to Jeff Sharlet, a professor of English at Dartmouth college and the author of the new book “Undertow: Scenes from a Slow Civil War.”
Survivors of a mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida organized that first march. One of them was David Hogg. NPR’s Adrian Florido speaks with Hogg about the triumphs and frustrations of the past five years and the movement’s hopes for the future.
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NPR’s Mary Childs wrote about Gross in her book, The Bond King: How One Man Made A Market, Built An Empire And Lost It All. She reported an episode about Gross for NPR’s Planet Money.
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NPR’s Cory Turner reports on the Mississippi Teacher Residency program, and on the impact it is having in the state’s capital, Jackson.
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Like many communities around the country, the Cherokee Nation received settlement money from big drug companies and pharmacy chains accused of fueling the opioid crisis. The tribe is investing that $100 million in programs to support treatment, harm reduction and a fight against stigma.
Tribal leaders say the funds will save lives and save families.
NPR’s addiction correspondent Brian Mann traveled to Oklahoma to see how the Cherokee Nation is fighting the opioid crisis.
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NPR’s Eric Westervelt was embedded with the U.S. Army’s Third Infantry Division as it pushed north from Kuwait. He describes what he saw in the first days of the war.
We also hear reporting from NPR’s Ruth Sherlock, who spoke to young Iraqis who grew up in the years since the invasion and are still trying to realize a better future for their country.
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In his State of the Union address that January, President George W. Bush announced a massive investment in the global fight against HIV –The President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief, or PEPFAR.
In the twenty years since, the program has dedicated billions of dollars to HIV prevention and treatment across Africa and other regions, saving tens of millions of lives.
NPR’s Pien Huang speaks with Ambassador Dr. John Nkengasong, the U.S. Global AIDS Coordinator, and Dr. Helene Gayle, an epidemiologist and president of Spelman College, who spent 20 years at the CDC focused on HIV treatment and prevention and global healthcare.