Millions of young people in U.S. and EU are neither working nor learning
More than six years after the Great Recession ended, almost 10.2 million teens and young adults in the U.S. are neither working nor in school.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
More than six years after the Great Recession ended, almost 10.2 million teens and young adults in the U.S. are neither working nor in school.
In an era of head-snapping racial, social, cultural, economic, religious, gender, generational and technological change, Americans have been sorting themselves into think-alike communities that reflect not only their politics but their demographics.
The latest data on the state of race relations in the U.S. and how much progress has been made — or not — in achieving racial equality.
What the data show on bullying, drug and alcohol use, depression, violence and other common sources of parental concern.
On the occasion of President Obama’s last State of the Union address, a look back at his first congressional address – his priorities, those of the public at the time and what’s happened in the years since.
From Millennials in the workforce to religion in America, our most popular posts told important stories about trends shaping our world.
In 2014, just 14% of children younger than 18 lived with a stay-at-home mother and a working father who were in their first marriage. In 1960, half of children were living in this arrangement.
Congress passed 113 laws, 87 of them substantive, in 2015, making it the most productive first session since 2009.
Congress passed 113 laws, 87 of them substantive, in 2015, making it the most productive first session since 2009
From trust in government to views of climate change, here are some of Pew Research Center’s most memorable findings of the year.
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