Immigrant neighborhoods in Massachusetts are feeling the strain of recent ICE actions, which have intensified in recent months. The Globe spent seven days in local communities to tell their stories. Continue reading →
As the House moved to pass the GOP's marquee bill, Democrats began testing out the attacks they hope will win them back Congress in 2026. Continue reading →
Battered by 12 days of war, Iran stands mostly alone and weakened in the Middle East. Yet the Islamic Republic has found friends elsewhere in the world. Continue reading →
As the Dalai Lama built a nation in exile after fleeing Chinese persecution in the 1950s, the young leader pinned its survival on an idea that had long fascinated him: democracy. Continue reading →
Why did a state social worker pose as a teen in three Boston schools and a treatment center? And how could nobody notice for so long? Continue reading →
Despite writing the fewest majority opinions, her voice resonated nonetheless, in an unusually large number of concurring and dissenting opinions, more than 20 in all. Continue reading →
By 2024, the Roosevelt Hotel had emerged as an unlikely symbol of the city’s migrant crisis. More than 155,000 migrants passed through its doors over two years. Continue reading →
Attendees, many of them dressed in white, gathered near Africatown Bridge on the banks of the river, where the ship remains submerged because it is too decayed to be extracted. Continue reading →
The stand-in Napoleon, wearing a black bicorne hat, looked just like the real Napoleon, sharing his 5-foot-6 height, angular nose, and light gray-blue eyes. There was one big difference: He was not French, but American Continue reading →
The stand-in Napoleon, wearing a black bicorne hat, looked just like the real Napoleon, sharing his 5-foot-6 height, angular nose, and light gray-blue eyes. There was one big difference: He was not French, but American Continue reading →
The modern problem of stopping Trump’s executive overreach requires 21st-century solutions. Instead, the Supreme Court handcuffed America to its past. Continue reading →