Even with its compromises, health reform is the most ambitious effort in decades to reorganize a big part of life around principles of justice and efficiency.
Features
Gentrification Hangover
Can a new era of affordable housing be created from the wreckage
of failed luxury real estate?
The Work Around
How some supervisors of low-wage workers break the rules
to make an unfair system a little bit fairer.
The Ruse of the Creative Class
Cities that shelled out big bucks to learn Richard Florida’s prescription for vibrant urbanism are now hearing they may be beyond help.
On the Books
Could microloans help America’s informal entrepreneurs become
business owners — and rescue urban economies in the process?
Beyond Bars
The “tough on crime” era is coming to an end, leaving bloated prisons and blighted neighborhoods in its wake. But what’s next?
A parole agent uses a flashlight to inspect a GPS locater worn on the ankle of a parolee.(AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli)
One More Bubble to Go
We’ve relied on a robust dollar to see us through the crisis, but that cushion is about to disappear.
Gay on Trial
After state-level defeats, lawyers are taking the case for gay rights to federal court.
Don’t Blame the Billionaires
It’s time for liberals to worry less about inequality.
Wall Street Meets Its Match
If Congress ends up with effective financial regulation, Sen. Maria Cantwell will deserve a lot of the credit.

