The gig economy is the site of a crucial battle in the fight for workers' rights, writes Dwayne David Paul. In their struggles for justice, workers fighting against unnecessary precarity enrich our Catholic tradition.
The good news is there are ways to reduce and eliminate the growth in global warming; the bad news is I am not sure we will implement them fast enough.
Since courts consider employees at Catholic institutions to be ministers, they can be fired or not hired for any reason. A civil rights attorney argues that employees or prospective employees should be told that.
Even as Pauline Hovey experienced just a tiny taste of the frustrations that immigration attorneys handling asylum cases deal with every day, she found a great gift in helping to free asylum seeker Sofia from detention.
Much of the division in the church is a symptom of deep-rooted injustices inflicted on marginalized groups, says Rebecca Bratten Weiss, so any solution has to go beyond simply finding common ground.
At a Catholic women's conference, a young woman discovers she is not alone — that despite not feeling heard, many young women are trying to make a place for themselves in the church.
Robert Christian argues that a countercultural witness, based on Catholic social teaching, could address all the doom we've been scrolling on social media.
Madison Chastain explores why encouraging self-determination and acceptance of bodies that change has implications for not only trans people, but women and disabled people as well.