
In Malawi, becoming a chief is a man's world. Or at least, it used to be. When Malawi's first female Ngoni chief took her seat, she did not wait to be accepted. She got to work. In three years, she has personally dissolved 850 child marriages — returning girls to school, to their families, and to childhoods that were being taken from them before they had barely begun. No legislation. No international task force. One woman, one community, and the authority to say: not here, not anymore. This is what leadership looks like when it actually serves the people it is supposed to protect. Read the full story below.

In Afghanistan, a woman is already one of the most dangerous things you can be. Now it is getting worse. Following the Taliban's ban on contraception, Afghan women are giving birth without doctors, miscarrying without medical treatment, and losing access to even the most basic medicine. According to recent projections, maternal deaths in Afghanistan could rise by 50% this year alone. Not because of war. Not because of drought. Because of policy. Deliberate, enforced, targeted policy — aimed specifically at the bodies of women. This is not a crisis that crept up quietly. It was built, one restriction at a time, by a government that has systematically dismantled every protection Afghan women had. What is happening now is the result. And the numbers are only going to get worse. Read the full story below.

She was married off at eleven. Assaulted for weeks by men who faced no consequences. Hunted by a government that had never protected her. Then she picked up a gun. On February 14, 1981 — Valentine's Day — Phoolan Devi led an armed gang into the village where she had been held captive and brutalized. Twenty-two men were shot dead on the banks of the Yamuna river. The Indian government launched one of the largest manhunts in Uttar Pradesh's history. They couldn't find her for two years. What happened next is the part nobody expects. The woman India was hunting would go on to surrender on her own terms, spend eleven years in prison without a single conviction, and then win a seat in the Parliament of the country that had jailed her. Twice. This is the real story of Phoolan Devi — the Bandit Queen of India. A story about caste, survival, justice, and what happens when every institution designed to protect you looks the other way. Read the full story below.

After Mean Girls and The Notebook made her one of the most sought-after actresses on the planet, Rachel McAdams turned down five blockbusters in two years and went home. The films she declined — Iron Man, Casino Royale, The Devil Wears Prada, Mission: Impossible III, and Get Smart — grossed billions. She said she needed to hear her own voice again

In 1985, cartoonist Alison Bechdel published a two-page comic strip in which a character stated she would only watch a film if it had at least two women who talked to each other about something other than a man. The last film that had met those requirements, the character noted, was Alien — released six years earlier. Forty years later, that joke is a metric used by Swedish cinemas, European film funds, and Hollywood studios.

In 1688 a Swiss medical student named Johannes Hofer noticed that soldiers sent far from their Alpine homes were dying — not from wounds or illness, but from longing. He named the condition nostalgia. For the next two centuries, physicians across Europe and America treated it, recorded it as a cause of death, and argued bitterly about how to cure it.

Until about 2015, family estrangement was one of the most common experiences nobody studied. Karl Pillemer at Cornell was stunned to find 27 percent of Americans were currently estranged from a family member. Here is what the research — slowly, carefully assembled across two decades — actually found
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