Israel’s governing coalition could be headed toward an early exit.
The president has pushed events as far as he can, but even American presidents have their limits.
The actual death toll matters—first, because of the dignity of those killed or still living.
An interview with David Chmielewski, a Princeton student who went on a hunger strike to demand divestment from Israel
Very few Americans—even young ones—rank the Israel-Hamas war as one of their top voting priorities.
Western leaders do themselves no good when they avoid confronting hard necessities.
A well-intentioned bill making its way through Congress could chill speech at colleges across the country.
The chaotic rise and fall of the anti-Bibi protester who became Israel’s spokesperson
A close look at the words being shouted at protests on campuses across the country reveals why some see the pro-Palestinian cause as so threatening.
Four things to understand about the ongoing negotiations
Faculty are involving themselves in student demonstrations, and sometimes getting injured or arrested. Are they helping?
Euphemism serves no one.
Some Columbia students are embracing extreme rhetoric.
“The actual war is in Gaza, but you wouldn't know it from news coverage this week of American campuses.”
The Columbia protesters backed themselves into a corner.
Too many leaders, on campus and in government, are failing to uphold the First Amendment rights they claim to champion.
The case for having the International Court of Justice hear two cases at once
What happens when protest culture and antidiscrimination law keep coming into conflict?
The difference between a private yard and a public forum
Elite colleges are now reaping the consequences of promoting a pedagogy that trashed the postwar ideal of the liberal university.