In Itaewon, Another Betrayal of Young Koreans Why have politicians and bureaucrats, of both major parties, failed so radically at the basic provision of public safety? November 2, 2022 A Ukrainian Prisoner of War’s Long Journey Home An elementary-school teacher returned to her family at the start of the war—then Russian soldiers took her away. October 27, 2022 The Extreme Economic Pain of Running a Restaurant in the U.K. In a country where eating out is seen as more of a luxury than a necessity, it is one of the first expenses that people forgo in hard times. October 15, 2022 Kyiv’s Peace Is Destroyed After repelling Russia’s assault earlier this year, the city awakens to missile strikes. October 10, 2022 Pakistan’s Unseen Climate-Change Survivors The social worker Quratulain Bakhteari is on a lonely mission to help flood survivors in the province of Balochistan. October 7, 2022 China and the Lore of American Manufacturing In Ohio’s Senate race, both candidates are employing anti-Asian rhetoric and neglecting to hold corporations to account. September 15, 2022 The Monks Who Took the Kora to Church Sixty years ago, a Senegalese monastery gave up the organ for the kora, a traditional calabash harp. The monks’ innovations brought the instrument to the world stage—and transformed sacred music. August 29, 2022 The Afghan Women Left Behind After the Taliban seized power in Afghanistan, a U.S. organization shut down the country’s largest network of women’s shelters. Its founders think that it made a huge mistake. August 24, 2022 The Sinkhole That Swallowed a Mexican Farm A bottled-water company tapped an ancient aquifer that thousands of people and businesses share. Then came the protests. August 3, 2022 The Upstart Union Challenging Starbucks Baristas nationwide are remarkably organized. Is the company’s C.E.O., Howard Schultz, using firings, store closures, and legal delays to thwart them? August 2, 2022