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Governance & Power

How democratic institutions actually work—and for whom. We investigate Supreme Court doctrine, voting rights litigation, municipal rebellion, particip...

How democratic institutions actually work—and for whom. We investigate Supreme Court doctrine, voting rights litigation, municipal rebellion, participatory budgeting, judicial activism, executive immunity, and the administrative state. From Chevron deference to bilingual governance, legal architecture shapes daily life.

37 articles

Blueprints and Blockades - Latin America's planning successes and interrupted development programs
governance

Blueprints and Blockades: Latin America's Planning Wins—and the Times They Were Stopped

Latin America did not lack planners or plans. It lacked uninterrupted time. Over the last century, the region produced sophisticated projects in transport, health, energy, and social protection. Many took root and quietly improved daily life. Others were intercepted—often by U.S. power, sometimes by U.S.-based firms—before they could mature.

December 4, 2025
Justice scales balanced between the seal of the United States and a private office door
governance

The Client Is the People: On Lawyers Who Mistake a President for a Republic

In the labyrinth of American law, the first wrong turn is often grammatical. Swap a singular for a plural—the President for the People—and a whole architecture shifts by degrees until courthouses feel like vestibules to a single man's will. What opens as error hardens into habit; what begins as advocacy calcifies into allegiance.

November 28, 2025
A ledger book dissolving into labyrinthine corridors of federal bureaucracy
governance

What DOGE Actually Did: Ten Months of Fake Savings and Real Damage

What looks like subtraction is often scorched ground; what looks like reform is frequently a breach of law. Ten months in, DOGE's balance sheet is legible—and the arithmetic of claims versus facts reveals a permanent contest between institutions designed to be slow and appetites designed to perform.

November 23, 2025
Newsroom under siege - editorial cuts and political pressure in modern media
governance

Fear, Trump, and the Edit: When One Splice Weaponizes an Entire Newsroom

A miscut speech, a $5 billion threat, and two resignations: how the BBC crisis reveals the asymmetric warfare against independent media. When power hunts for seams in newsroom armor, every error becomes a hostage situation—and even UK Labour ministers declare the BBC "must change."

November 15, 2025
Archive room with treaty documents and historical maps
governance

The Art of Witness: How Experts, Archives, and Doctrine Restored Indian Country

In American Indian law, the most transformative victories seldom arrive with parades. They arrive as sentences: "Congress has not said otherwise." Those sentences depend on an architecture—expert affidavits, maps, ledgers, and a disciplined order of proof—that turns memory into law.

November 14, 2025
Glass building with code and policy documents visible through transparent walls
governance

App-Store States: Platforms as Quasi-Governments

In the museum of code there is a wing where the labels feel like laws. Merchants line up with packages and petitions, and somewhere deep inside the glass, an algorithm arranges who may be seen, which is a form of sovereignty.

November 7, 2025
Network diagram overlaid on calendar grid with childcare and eldercare nodes
governance

The Care Grid: Treating Childcare and Eldercare as Infrastructure

Every city has a network you can't point to on a map. It runs under the hours of the day, not the streets. Treat care as a grid—with uptime targets, dispatch rules, and capacity planning—not as weather.

November 7, 2025
The Harm in the Middle - How false balance and both-sideism undermine independent critical journalism
governance

The Harm in the Middle: How 'Both-Sideism' Is Strangling Independent, Critical Media

Both-sideism is not neutrality; it is a production method that assigns equal weight to unequal claims, awards airtime as if truth were a parity contract, and punishes outlets that test reality before publishing. In today's asymmetric politics, this method doesn't balance coverage—it subsidizes bad faith and bankrupts independent, critical media.

November 4, 2025
Historic county courthouse with probate court sign
governance

Guardianship as Extraction: How Courts Dispossessed Native Wealth

In the American West, conquest moved indoors—into county probate courts. For Native families, the guardianship complex from 1890s-1950s didn't protect wealth; it redirected it through "approved" sales and fees that left wards with little more than a file.

November 3, 2025
Federal agents in tactical gear during immigration enforcement operation
governance

After Ten Months: What We've Learned About Power, Policing, and the Word We Hesitate to Use

Ten months into Trump's second term, we have enough evidence to test the term "fascist" in practice. Not by tallying tweets, but by looking at state power: who it targets, how it moves, and what it leaves behind. Three arenas tell the story: immigration enforcement, elections, and deployments as leverage.

October 31, 2025