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Vol. 6 No. 23July 2012
Culture
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How the Gay-Rights Movement Won
Linda Hirshman's new book tries to uncover how the LGBT movement accomplished so much in such a short span of time. -
The Mother of All Girls' Books
The secret subversiveness of Louisa May Alcott's Little Women -
Our Most Widely Ignored Public Intellectuals
Why don't those in power listen to economists Joseph Stiglitz and Paul Krugman?
Up Front
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The Democrats' Demographic Dreams
Liberals are counting on population trends to doom Republicans to a long-term minority. They shouldn’t.
Departments
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The Sixties at 50
Half a century later, the battles of the 1960s--and the effects of one great wrong turn by liberals of that time--are still with us.
Features
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Seeing What No One Else Could See
Fifty years ago, Michael Harrington’s The Other America awoke the nation to the prevalence of poverty in its midst. -
The State of Poverty in America
The problem is worse than we thought, but we can solve it. -
Mismeasuring Poverty
The way we determine who needs help blocks many poor people from receiving the assistance they need. -
Where Work Disappears and Dreams Die
In Gary, Indiana—the former “Magic City” of industrial might—jobs have left, and so has almost everything else. -
Creating a Countercyclical Welfare System
Clinton-era reforms mean that our safety net is weakest when we need it most. -
Pressing On the Upward Way
A profile of life in one of the country's poorest counties -
The Geography of Getting By
Vendors in Los Angeles' MacArthur Park fight for their right to sell. -
School for Success
Capital Idea, an innovative long-term job-training program in Austin, helps lift the working poor out of poverty.
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Vol. 23 No. 5June 2012
Culture
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Our Battle Scars
The Cause tells how liberals gave America the best of the 20th century. So why is it so hard to be one? -
The Good Lyndon
Finally, Robert Caro lightens up on LBJ. -
Too Big to Imagine
Steve Coll's Private Empire tells you every last thing about ExxonMobil—except what to do about it.
Up Front
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Big Sky's the Limit
Like many congressional races around the country, Montana’s Senate contest is being defined by previously unthinkable levels of outside spending.
Departments
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Schools of Doom
Why, after a decade of reform, is American education still in crisis? -
Hard Times, Scary Prospects
Help save The American Prospect at this critical juncture in the magazine—and the nation's—history.
Features
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The Pro-Life Paradox
Why are anti-abortion legislators cutting essential funds for special-needs children? -
Keyboard Jihadist?
The government prosecuted Tarek Mehanna because of what he wrote online in a case that raises fundamental questions about First Amendment rights in post-9/11 America. -
Mitt Romney, Servant of the Right
Those who believe the former Massachusetts governor would become a moderate once in office are wrong. -
The Romney Foreign-Policy Agenda
The next president will face critical challenges, but Mitt Romney has offered no clear vision of America's role in the world. What can we learn from his team of advisers?
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Vol. 23 No. 4May 2012
Culture
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Power Failure
Two new books on why nations gain and lose wealth and power miss the real story. -
Rebuilding the World
Anthony Shadid's final book on the remaking of a house in Lebanon -
The Case of the Vanishing Middle Class
Timothy Noah's The Great Divergence deftly explores the roots and resurgence of American inequality. -
Charles Murray, the Long View
In 1984, the right's star public intellectual wrote the book that drove welfare reform. Coming Apart is an alibi for his own failed big idea. -
Vive la Mère
Is breastfeeding the new patriarchy? Elisabeth Badinter overstates her case—and overlooks what the French can really teach us about raising children. -
Part Two: Charles Murray, the Long View
Coming Apart caps three decades of faux concern for the poor. -
Dreams from My President
Three and a half years after his election, Barack Obama remains a mystery to many Americans.
Up Front
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Mad Money
With right-wing fears rising over the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy, Republican state legislators want to create their own currencies.
Departments
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The New Wave
Politicians going after birth control had no idea what they were in for. -
Three Roads from the Supreme Court
None of the options for health-care reform is ideal, but the most likely path forward would be through action in the states.
Special Report
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Exporting the Anti-Gay Movement
How sexual minorities in Africa became collateral damage in the U.S. culture wars -
Still Ain't Satisfied: The Limits of Equality
The LGBT-rights movement should fight for economic and social justice—not simply de jure civil rights.
Features
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Don't Blame "Corporate Personhood"
Citizens United decimated what remained of campaign-finance reform, but the damage has been long in the making. -
The Man the Banks Fear Most
Wall Street's gone largely unpunished for its role in wrecking the economy—until New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman came along. -
The Death and Life of Detroit
Neighborhood groups are bringing the blighted city back, one block at a time. Will City Hall stand in their way?
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Vol. 23 No. 3April 2012
Culture
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What's the Point of College?
A critical look at the state of the American university -
Stacked Decks
The Titanic’s surprisingly timely centenary -
A Nightstick Turned into a Song
Two new books and a documentary cue up the soundtrack of the black-power movement. -
Rachel Maddow, the Lovable Wonk
With the release of her latest book, Drift, MSNBC’s biggest star shows once again why she's captured the liberal imagination. -
Barbarians at the Transom
Lionel Shriver's The New Republic is a provocative and satiric novel about—of all things—terrorism. -
History Lessons
When historian Tony Judt cared passionately about a problem he was able to redefine its terms. Pity he didn't care about a few more things.
Up Front
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The Other Glass Ceiling
Even in the Age of Obama, serious impediments remain for the most ambitious black politicians.
Departments
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Don't Fear the "T" Word
Raising taxes is supposed to be political suicide. Governors Jerry Brown and Martin O'Malley are proving otherwise. -
Hold Off on the Obama Victory Dance
The president's re-election chances have improved, but Obama faces severe tests on energy and national security.
Special Report
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The Pacific Pivot
America needs to try something new when it comes to international trade. -
A Stealth Attack on Democratic Governance
Why are Obama trade negotiators pushing the extreme Trans-Pacific Partnership, and why is it being negotiated in such an untransparent manner? -
The Myth of the Level Playing Field
The boast that American workers are naturally superior to other workers and would therefore “win” in any fair competition is problematic at best and at worst, a pander to our national delusion of exceptionalism. -
Not a Great Deal for Asia
The Trans-Pacific Partnership could end up hurting the broader economic interests of both the U.S. and smaller Asian nations.
Features
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The Age of Double Standards
American Airlines can declare bankruptcy and wipe away debt. But you can’t—and that’s just the beginning. -
How to Contain a Nuclear Iran
Regime change is a pipe dream. Is there a way to keep peace in Tehran without it? -
Six Portraits of Mitt
Just how rich is the Republican presidential candidate? -
Wolves to the Slaughter
The reintroduction of the gray wolf to the Northern Rockies was an ecological success story—until big money, old superstitions, and politics got in the way.
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Vol. 23 No. 2March 2012
Culture
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Three Big Tax Lies
And two must-read new books that finally debunk them. -
Watergate Finally Gets Its Novel
Thomas Mallon's new fiction humanizes the ultimate D.C. scandal. -
The Inside Track
Luck, HBO’s horse-racing series, is about the other American pastime: gaming the system. -
What It Feels Like to Be Poor
Katherine Boo chronicles the intimate realities of poverty in an Indian slum.
Up Front
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No Funds Left Behind
As states slash education budgets, private foundations have picked up the slack—and pushed some controversial reforms.
Departments
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Mitt Romney, Hero of Finance
Romney’s backers say he did the tough work needed to restructure the economy. Actually, he seized opportunities that the tax, securities, and bankruptcy laws should never have given him.
Special Report
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Capital Ideas Online
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The Cost of Financial Favoritism
If Republicans and Democrats can't find common ground on giving assistance to small banks and Community Development Financial Institutions, they aren't liable to agree on anything. -
Freelance Nation
Progressives need to make government work better by helping out entrepreneurs and the self-employed. -
The Credit Drought
It's hard for small businesses to get a leg up in this sluggish economy. -
Too Small to Bail?
An interview with Sheila Bair. -
The Destruction of Black Wealth
Businesses owned by African Americans are suffering at higher rates than most during the downturn.
Features
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Wall Street's Third Party
Will Americans Elect upend the presidential election? -
Susan B. Anthony's Hit List
How a group founded by anti-abortion feminists became a powerful foe of Democratic women.
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