Abortion in a world where reproductive justice is realized means allowing each person full autonomy over their pregnancy decision.| YES! Magazine
For decades, queer communities have used boycotts to combat erasure and demand liberation.| YES! Magazine
Forgotten or destroyed trans narratives can still foster change for future trans generations.| YES! Magazine
This form of care can be hard to access for those who have a uterus in a medical system built for cis women having babies.| YES! Magazine
When we interrogate the symbolism of the LGBTQ flag, we can disrupt the myth that queer communities have always been harmonious.| YES! Magazine
After a failed War on Drugs, Échele Cabeza is working to protect drug consumers rather than penalize them.| YES! Magazine
A simple, low-cost method is helping impoverished women identify abnormal cervical cells and prevent premature cancer deaths.| YES! Magazine
“The Stonewall Rebellion is not over. We are at war, and we are still fighting back.”| YES! Magazine
The presence of employees with disabilities can make companies and organizations more collaborative, inclusive, and attractive to job seekers.| YES! Magazine
Video games will not fix a broken world, but queering them can show players and non-players alike how to reimagine ours.| YES! Magazine
A budget proposal from House Republicans could gut Medi-Cal. Families and advocates want to preserve a more certain future for their children’s care.| YES! Magazine
Disabled couples risk losing their benefits when they marry. A new documentary spotlights the fight to change that.| YES! Magazine
Conservatives want to control and own our bodies. We can’t let them.| YES! Magazine
“This is an ambitious, multilayered project,” says Nathalie Herschdorfer, director of Photo Elysée and Jury President of the Lausanne museum’s biennial prize for a mid-career photographer, commenting on the latest recipient, Hannah Darabi’s Why Don’t You Dance?| 1854 Photography
Hannah Darabi is the winner of the 2025 Prix Elysée with her powerful project ‘Why Don’t You Dance?'| 1854 Photography