Will deleted emails be an issue for 2016? Clinton is intent on protecting her privacy. She's willing to take a political hit to do so.
Are 47 senators guilty of treason, or are they patriots standing up to what some call the tyranny of President Barack Obama?
Bereft of U.S. weapons, Iraqi soldiers and Sunni tribes are fighting the Islamic State group with a brutally effective method.
ISIS militants reportedly destroyed a third archaeological site in Iraq -- this time, an ancient Assyrian city in modern Khorsabad.
The Sunni jihadist group said the pair must face "God's judgment."
Defense companies in the world's 12th-largest arms-exporting nation had made hundreds of millions of dollars from the accord.
Labor conditions have improved in Bangladesh's garment industry, according to a report.
The hostage, Mohamed Said Ismail Musallam, 19, was accused of being a spy for the Israeli Mossad.
The former secretary of state admitted that she should have used a state.gov email address, but defended her actions as legal.
The migrant workers say they haven’t received their housing allowances as required by law.
People can visit whitehouse.gov/collegeopportunity to show support for the plan.
Both groups stand to reap propaganda gains, but it's not clear Boko Haram will get the operational support it needs from ISIS.
The International Franchise Association says Seattle's wage increase discriminates against franchises.
Mexico's ambassador to the U.N. hit back against a scathing report detailing security forces' use of beatings and electric shocks.
Suspects linked to an attack in Guangzhou planned to join Islamic State group militants in the Middle East, a report says.
It turns out -- surprise! -- the sugar industry didn't want researchers focusing too much on consuming less sugar.
"If Canberra keeps doing things that displease Indonesia, Jakarta will surely let the illegal immigrants go to Australia."
Clinton is expected to take questions about the email controversy for the first time from reporters. Watch the live stream here.
The university's president, David Boren, said an investigation into the Sigma Alpha Epsilon incident is ongoing.
Clean energy job creation last year was down 40 percent from 2013, in part because of expiring tax credits.
The defense argued that some of Tsarnaev's incriminating tweets were mostly pop culture references.
Ukraine says rebels are removing heavy weaponry from the front and concentrating it near Donetsk.
Two police officers and a commercial airline pilot sustained eye injuries from the suspect's powerful beam device.
The defendant received a chance to avoid a 40-year jail sentence if convicted of murder in a trial.
The former secretary of state has faced criticism from Republicans, who contend that she may have violated federal regulations.
The new authority will help him defend against the "aggression" of new U.S. sanctions on Venezuela, Maduro said.
U.S. student loan debt has hit an all-time high, $1.1 trillion, and the average college student debt last year rose to $28,400.
The United Steelworkers union and Shell are back at the bargaining table this week.
More than 8,500 death row prisoners could soon face execution in a judicial system that critics regard as "seriously flawed."
New footage shows a member of the fraternity trying to discourage the video-recording of an N-word-laced chant.