Backlash to Anitta’s Music Video Evokes a Painful History in Brazil
Outrage over the pop star’s new music video brought Brazil’s struggle with religious intolerance into view.
By Orlando Mayorquín
Outrage over the pop star’s new music video brought Brazil’s struggle with religious intolerance into view.
By Orlando Mayorquín
The Nobel laureate, whose precisely written stories about southwestern Ontario many considered “without equal,” died this week at 92.
By Ian Austen
A system of dams and canals may soon be unable to provide water to one of the world’s largest cities, a confluence of unchecked growth, crumbling infrastructure and a changing climate.
By James Wagner, Emiliano Rodríguez Mega, Somini Sengupta and César Rodríguez
The police believe the killer, who died in an Idaho jail, may be linked to the unsolved murders of other women in British Columbia, Alberta and the United States.
By Vjosa Isai and Jeremy Appel
The sport came to Beto Gomez’s small Indigenous town nearly two decades ago. Despite some resistance back home, he is now the world’s only professional kite surfer with Wayuu roots.
By James Wagner and Federico Rios
Venezuela’s election features an opposition candidate with a slim, if improbable, chance of defeating the country’s long-ruling authoritarian leader.
By Genevieve Glatsky
The fire, near Fort McMurray, Alberta, has put the community, which is haunted by the costliest wildfire in Canadian history, on high alert.
By Ian Austen
Some of the animals will stay in sanctuaries, while others may be released into the wild.
By Jesus Jiménez
FIFA tried to put a corruption crisis behind by changing its rules and claiming its governance overhaul had the endorsement of the Justice Department. U.S. officials say that was never the case.
By Tariq Panja
Her stories were widely considered to be without equal, a mixture of ordinary people and extraordinary themes.
By Anthony DePalma
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