Antonia Hylton
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam's apology tour got off to a really bad start
The first stop in Gov. Ralph Northam's apology tour did not go well
What it's like for minority students applying to elite colleges with affirmative action under threat
One student briefly considered not acknowledging his Asian descent on his application.
Meet a 17-year-old rising star among Wisconsin Democrats
Before the 2016 election, Lydia Hester was a shy Madison high schooler. After Trump's election, she bought a bullhorn and got to work.
How Michigan's water crises turned one nonvoter into a political organizer
Activists Michigan say that as they knock on the doors of the houses and families that don’t typically vote they keep hearing the same thing: Water is one of their top concerns
Eric Holder on the bomb threats: "It is a sign of the times"
“I think history will show that the Shelby County decision that gutted the Voting Rights Act is probably one of the worst decisions that any Supreme Court has ever rendered.”
The U.S. is checking immigrant kids' teeth to see if they actually belong in adult detention
ICE and ORR are using controversial dental science and race studies to figure out how old kids are.
The justice system in this Georgia city is run entirely by eight progressive black women
Two years ago South Fulton, Georgia built the first entirely black and female criminal justice system from scratch
Zero Tolerance: One immigrant family's journey from separation to reunification
This is how disorganized the family separation process really was
Listen to a distraught Guatemalan child call his mother from a U.S. immigration shelter
"Don’t cry my love. Be happy, you are going to get out of there."
Listen to an immigration judge tell this mother: "I have no information about your child"
The "zero tolerance" policy shift has upped the workload for attorneys and clogged federal courtrooms with, at times, over 75 defendants in a given hearing.
Rich parents in New York City are mad their schools are trying to desegregate
One of the city’s wealthiest, wokest districts is constructing a plan to do something about its segregation.
Hair braiders in New Jersey are at constant risk of losing their jobs. Now, they're fighting back.
Anita runs a hair braiding shop, but she doesn’t have a cosmetology license. In the eyes of the state of New Jersey, her practice is illegal.