More American women are turning away from religion. Marcie Bianco explores why this bodes well for feminism.
Mary Elias, of Laje village in Malawi’s southern Zomba district, speaks in metaphors. “We are carrying both water cans,” she says of the situation for single mothers in drought-ridden Malawi—meaning that women with children but without partners are solely responsible for feeding, clothing, and educating their progeny. Already a Sisyphean task in a country the United Nations Development Program regularly ranks in the top 20 poorest on earth, this has become nearly impossible in the past few years.
A group of women in the Indian region of Sundarbans are using photography to draw attention to the ravages of climate change in their villages.
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