Newsweek

The Archives

1991

BC and decided to reveal the name of the woman who accused William Kennedy Smith of rape, about which wrote, “the media’s coverage of the Kennedy case fueled the debate over an increasingly controversial issue: should rape victims be identified in the press?” The move raised “new questions about a woman’s right to privacy—and how to erase the stigma of rape.” Since the beginning of the #MeToo movement, more and more women have come forward voluntarily, giving them both a voice and agency as they tell their stories.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Newsweek

Newsweek7 min read
Divine Intervention
ISHOP JOSEPH STRICKLAND DID not always have a difficult relationship with Pope Francis. When Francis became the head of the Catholic Church, Strickland recalls admiring how welcoming the pope was. But as the pontiff began taking increasingly liberal
Newsweek6 min readInternational Relations
Is It Time to Leave Syria?
by JOHN FENZEL FEW PEOPLE TODAY RECOGNIZE the name of Alois Brunner. As the right hand of Nazi official Adolf Eichmann, he was one of the most notorious figures of the Holocaust, responsible for the deaths of an estimated 130,000 Jews in exterminati
Newsweek6 min readWorld
‘We’re Living a Nightmare—Day After Day’
WHEN SHAY BENJAMIN’S FATHER RON WENT MISS-ing on October 7, she cried for 15 hours straight. She was in Dubai, returning from a vacation in the Philippines, when a flurry of cellphone messages alerted her to the unfolding events in Israel on October

Related Books & Audiobooks