News Clip9:28
PBS

Rosa Parks Trained for Life Full of Activism

12th - Higher Ed
Gwen Ifill talks with biographer Jeanne Theoharis, whose book "The Rebellious Life of Mrs. Rosa Parks" offers a complex portrait of the woman best known for refusing to give up her seat on an Alabama bus in 1955.
News Clip9:39
PBS

Conversation with Dorothy Height

12th - Higher Ed
Gwen Ifill talks with Dorothy Height, a legend of the civil rights movement and former head of the National Council of Negro Women, about her memoir, "Open Wide the Freedom Gates."
News Clip10:21
PBS

1 million Russians are HIV-positive, but only a third get treatment

12th - Higher Ed
Russia's HIV epidemic is growing by 10 percent per year, and yet many proven HIV prevention and treatment strategies aren't being used. William Brangham and Jason Kane report in collaboration with Jon Cohen of Science Magazine and the...
News Clip6:52
PBS

Abortion Kolbert

12th - Higher Ed
A leaked early draft of a coming Supreme Court decision suggests Roe v. Wade could be struck down. The landmark decision established the constitutional right to abortion and the last major challenge to it came in a 1992 case called...
News Clip9:07
PBS

As Taliban Peace Talks Resume, What's At Stake For Afghan Women?

12th - Higher Ed
During his surprise Thanksgiving trip to Afghanistan, President Trump announced he had restarted talks with the Taliban.The ability of the conflict-wracked nation to achieve peace is at stake -- but so is progress for women, who could...
News Clip6:25
PBS

Erasing the pain and taboo of fistulas

12th - Higher Ed
Roughly one million women in the developing world suffer from obstetric fistula, an injury that results from inadequate medical care and causes incontinence. But beyond the physical effects, the condition can subject them to shame and...
News Clip7:03
PBS

Why this 13-year-old Rohingya refugee faces intense pressure to marry

12th - Higher Ed
Child marriage is common among the Rohingya, but for those who have fled terror in Myanmar, insecurity and poverty is pushing many families to marry off their daughters even earlier. Special correspondent Tania Rashid and videographer...
News Clip9:39
PBS

Retracing Roots with 'The African-American National Biography' (April 16, 2008)

12th - Higher Ed
Renowned African-American writers Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Evelyn Brooks Higginbotham discuss their joint project, 'The African-American National Biography'.
News Clip7:40
PBS

Author Elaine Pagels Explores Why Humans Rely On Religious Belief

12th - Higher Ed
Why do people have faith in what they cannot see? Author Elaine Pagels explores the concept of religious belief, and shares her own experience with finding faith in the face of tragedy, in her new book, "Why Religion?" Jeffrey Brown...
News Clip8:43
PBS

Even with Roe v. Wade intact, many states have aggressively restricted abortion access

12th - Higher Ed
Judge Brett Kavanaugh's nomination to the Supreme Court has many abortion rights advocates worried that the landmark 1973 Roe v. Wade decision is in imminent peril. In many places the rollback of access is already steadily progressing....
News Clip6:51
PBS

How one woman brought life-saving maternity care to Somaliland

12th - Higher Ed
Somaliland, a region of Somalia that lay in ruin from years of war, suffers some of the world's highest rates of infant and maternal mortality. But 15 years ago, Edna Adan fulfilled a lifelong dream by building a nonprofit hospital...
News Clip8:34
PBS

Douglas Wilson: Honor's Voice

12th - Higher Ed
Book: Honor’s Voice: The Transformation of Abraham Lincoln
News Clip5:21
PBS

How Fiction Draws Pulitzer-Winner Elizabeth Strout Home To Maine

12th - Higher Ed
Olive Kitteridge is overbearing and hard to love, as well as complicated and compelling. The character at the center of Elizabeth Strout's 2009 Pulitzer-winning novel is also back -- in a new book called Olive, Again. Strout takes...
News Clip9:14
PBS

How migrants and refugees are being welcomed in tiny Italian village

12th - Higher Ed
Starting tomorrow, the European Union plans to start sending back some of the 170,000 migrants and refugees who have made the dangerous journey by sea to Europe this year. Along another main migrant sea route from North Africa toward...
News Clip7:28
News Clip10:25
PBS

Dr. Jerome Groopman (2000 Author Interview)

12th - Higher Ed
Book: Second Opinion: Stories of Intuition and Choice in the Changing World of Medicine
News Clip9:39
PBS

When migrants' desparate journey becomes a deadly journey

12th - Higher Ed
The NewsHour's Malcolm Brabant was there, and the cameras were rolling, as the Doctors Without Borders rescue ship he was on came across a horrific scene: More than 20 migrants dead on an unseaworthy ship that was taking them from...
News Clip6:39
PBS

For child migrants, desperate journey to freedom is especially dangerous

12th - Higher Ed
The boat trip from North Africa to Italy has ended in death and heartbreak for many migrants. It has been especially tough on children, many of whom come by themselves. In the second of a three-part Desperate Journey series from the...
News Clip8:17
PBS

Women leading Danish mosque challenge patriarchy and right-wing religious control

12th - Higher Ed
Along with Scandinavia's first female imam, Mariam mosque in Copenhagen is reinterpreting the Koran with a focus on women's rights, including the right to marry outside the faith and file for divorce. NewsHour Weekend Special...
News Clip14:40
PBS

As survivors say #MeToo, what will it take to stop widespread sexual harassment?

12th - Higher Ed
In the wake of the Harvey Weinstein story, the hashtag #MeToo has inspired millions of women to share stories of harassment in the workplace and culture. Judy Woodruff explores whatÕs driving the movement with Fatima Goss Graves of...
News Clip3:20
PBS

A poet who holds the men behind the music accountable

12th - Higher Ed
Inspired by the people who have come forward as part of the #MeToo movement, Imani Davis shares her poem “Platinum” and gives her Brief but Spectacular take on how society can overlook wrongdoing by famous artists.
News Clip6:25
PBS

How This Philanthropist Hopes To Boost Mid-Career Women Artists

12th - Higher Ed
The work of women artists makes up only 3 to 5 percent of major museums' permanent collections in the U.S. and Europe. Many of these artists struggle financially -- but Susan Unterberg is trying to change that. For decades, the artist...
Instructional Video12:24
Crash Course

Cities of Myth: Crash Course World Mythology

12th - Higher Ed
This week on Crash Course Mythology, we're getting urban. Mike Rugnetta is the man with the orange umbrella who's about to give you a free tour of mythical cities. We'll talk about a few cities that didn't exist, but we're going to focus...
Instructional Video4:16
SciShow

The Unsung Scientist Behind the Building Blocks of DNA | Marie M. Daly

12th - Higher Ed
Our understanding of both clogged arteries and the building blocks of DNA are thanks to the groundbreaking work of Dr. Marie M. Daly, the first Black woman in the U.S. to receive a Ph. D. in chemistry.