I am assembling a collection of fifty well-researched, easy-to-read pieces that explain today’s most talked-about social issues to the general public. Each article should adopt an informative tone—no hard selling, no jargon—so that any reader can grasp the core facts, the context behind them, and the human angle that makes the topic matter. Scope and style • Topics may span anything from income inequality and climate justice to mental-health stigma, gender equity, housing affordability, digital privacy, and similar concerns. Feel free to propose a balanced mix so the series feels fresh and varied. • Aim for clear, neutral language backed by recent statistics or reputable studies where relevant. Citations or links are welcome but must be from reliable, publicly accessible sources. • Originality is essential; I will run plagiarism checks on delivery. • Tone should remain accessible: think newspaper feature or magazine explainer rather than academic paper. Deliverables • 50 completed articles (roughly 800–1,000 words each, but I am flexible if the content warrants slightly more or less). • Each file named after its topic and delivered in Google Docs or Word. • A brief (one-sentence) meta description plus three to five focus keywords per article for basic SEO alignment. Acceptance criteria The project is finished once all articles are submitted, pass originality checks, read smoothly for a lay audience, and adhere to the informative brief above. If that sounds clear, let’s get started—looking forward to seeing your outline and first drafts soon.