Stefani Cox

Stefani Cox

Ideafeed Editor

Stefani is a writer based in the California Bay Area with expertise in urban issues and public health. In her free time she is often found reading diverse literature, writing stories, or enjoying the outdoors.  Follow her on Twitter: @stefanicox

A beautiful Scandinavian country might be paying its residents more than $800 a month, with no strings attached.
Beijing just had a red alert for air quality for the first time. But what else is it up to?
If we can't reach a national consensus and the Supreme Court can't agree, it might be for each state to decide.  
Get in the know about one of the world's most gorgeous natural events.
Iran is starting to show works of Western art that have been underground for 40 years.
Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan will give away billions through their new LLC.
Women's entrepreneurship is a big key to solving global poverty. How can we make it easier for women to start their own businesses?
It's been 60 years since Rosa Parks stood up for equality on a Montgomery, Alabama, bus. What would she have to say today?
The NSA's ability to get records from telecommunications companies just changed, and that's a good thing.
A drug is going into human testing that could prevent rapid aging.
In Albuquerque and London, organizations are using small-scale employment to give homeless people another chance.
New research suggests that converting all of our energy to renewable energy might actually be possible by 2050.
Conversations about police brutality and stereotyping are incomplete without a look at the racial wealth gap.
Google has a new tool out to help you compare mortgages. Will it be setting trends for a new market in the upcoming years?
Syrian refugees and others are in crisis, but to approach the problem with temporary solutions won't get us very far.
Research now says that we all react differently to the same foods. Maybe grabbing that cookie isn't as bad as we thought it was.
Nature versus nurture is back, and this time it's about happiness. Do our behaviors make us happy, or does our brain?