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The best guarantee on the professionalism, honesty, and effectiveness of its delivery is to let international journalists ...
For Robert Jay Lifton, treating veterans’ trauma was an antiwar tool. How did PTSD, the diagnosis he helped create, come to accommodate state violence?
With no endowment or single funder, Boston Review relies on the generosity of readers to keep publishing. If you value the writing in our pages, please consider making a donation today to support our ...
The saga of the Klamath provokes a more fundamental, yet often ignored, set of questions: What is a river for? Irrigation?
To deliver plentiful housing and clean energy, we have to get the story right about what’s standing in the way.
This essay is featured in our Winter 2025 issue, Trump’s Return. The lineup at Donald Trump’s second inaugural was a veritable billionaire’s row, with the heaviest hitters of Big Tech out in full ...
The Eighteenth Brumaire of Donald J. Trump The tragic reascent of Trump is not an anomaly to democracy but its fatal flaw.
The Parenting Panic Contrary to both far right and mainstream center-left, there’s no epidemic of chosen childlessness.
A conversation with Wendy Brown on the U.S. presidential election, the exclusions liberal democracy is built on, and why we must aim at more than restoring its mythical former splendor.
More important, even the most generous attempts to protect the political and socioeconomic rights of individuals leave some duties of individuals to their own states and all humanity out of account, ...
Philip K. Dick and the Fake Humans We live in Philip K. Dick’s future, not George Orwell’s or Aldous Huxley’s.
As many have argued, the high stakes of this “new oil” call for radically new forms of governance. A central concern in this effort—as much as a matter of power as of equity—is the question of ...
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