UGA: The job market tightens, but new journalism grads remain upbeat
Job growth for recent journalism and mass communication grads stalled in 2013 with minority students hit particularly hard by the slowdown, a new survey shows.
Job growth for recent journalism and mass communication grads stalled in 2013 with minority students hit particularly hard by the slowdown, a new survey shows.
Technological change already has reshaped the U.S. workforce -- creating new job categories while others fade away.
To most Americans, citizenship, like DNA, seems like something a parent passes to a child without thought or effort. And indeed, for fathers around the world, that’s almost universally true. But one-in-seven countries currently have laws or policies prohibiting or limiting the rights of women to pass citizenship to a child or non-citizen spouse.
New data shows that thousands of unaccompanied Mexican children caught at the border have crossed into the U.S. multiple times.
Neither world power has a clear advantage when it comes to the hearts and minds of people in Africa.
The number of black journalists working at U.S. daily newspapers has dropped 40% since 1997. That represents a loss of almost 1,200 journalists — from 2,946 in 1997 to 1,754 in 2013.
The U.S. public is evenly split in its view of the Supreme Court decision ruling that some for-profit corporations have religious rights and can opt out of the Affordable Care Act’s contraception mandate.
Despite growing political polarization between the GOP and Democratic bases, there's a sizable "middle" that still matters in elections.
This interactive chart makes comparing occupational employment and pay across states not only easy but fun.
Midway through its second and final year, the 113th Congress remains one of the least legislatively productive in recent history.