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ACLU Files Brief for Chelsea Manning's Health

Jos Truitt Feminsting
ACLU staff attorney Chase Strangio explains, “Chelsea has been fighting since she arrived at the [United States Disciplinary Barracks] more than two years ago to receive treatment for her gender dysphoria and to be treated like the woman that she is.

How Big Oil Spiked Jerry Brown’s Climate Change Agenda

Gary Cohn Capital and Main
As Governor Jerry Brown touted California’s environmental initiatives and prodded world leaders in Paris to embrace tougher environmental policies during the United Nations summit on climate change, it was instructive to look back at how one of Brown’s top environmental priorities suffered a major defeat in the California Legislature this year.

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Center for the Study of Political Graphics Center for the Study of Political Graphics
Artist unknown, Photo by John Slavicek, Offset, circa 1970, United States, 4967

How a Supreme Court Case Could Disempower Communities of Color in the South

Allie Yee The Institute for Southern Studies
The week of December 9, 2015, the Supreme Court heard arguments in a Texas redistricting case that has the potential to the change the balance of political representation in congressional and legislative districts across the South and the country.

Four reasons for labor to cheer in the South

Joe Atkins Facing South
Labor activists and other progressive folks in the South have four new reasons to cheer: a United Auto Workers victory in Chattanooga, the rare criminal conviction of a coal mining boss in connection with the death of miners who worked for him, the victory of a populist Democrat in Louisiana's gubernatorial race, and a union victory in Laurel, Mississippi.