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RICO is often used to target the mob and cartels − but Trump and his associates aren't the first outside those worlds to face charges

  • Written by Gabriel J. Chin, Professor of Criminal Law, Immigration, and Race and Law, University of California, Davis
imageFulton County District Attorney Fani Willis speaks during a news conference after former President Donald Trump's Aug. 15 indictment. Joe Raedle/Getty Images

It might seem odd to some that former President Donald Trump and his co-defendants, many of whom are lawyers and served as senior government officials, were charged with racketeering regarding...

Read more: RICO is often used to target the mob and cartels − but Trump and his associates aren't the first...

50 years after the Bunker Hill mine fire caused one of the largest lead-poisoning cases in US history, Idaho's Silver Valley is still at risk

  • Written by Martin Schiavenato, Assistant Professor of Nursing, Gonzaga University
imageWaterways and communities for miles around Idaho's Bunker Hill mine were contaminated with lead after the 1973 fire.gjohnstonphoto/iStock/Getty Images Plus

On Sept. 3, 1973, a fire swept through the baghouse of the Bunker Hill mine in Idaho’s Silver Valley. The building was designed to filter pollutants produced by smelting, the melting of...

Read more: 50 years after the Bunker Hill mine fire caused one of the largest lead-poisoning cases in US...

Workers like it when their employers talk about diversity and inclusion

  • Written by Rita Men, Professor of Public Relations and Director of Internal Communication Research, University of Florida

Many companies have made commitments toward diversity, equity and inclusion initiatives in recent years, particularly since the murder of George Floyd sparked weeks of racial justice riots in 2020.

But some of those efforts, such as hiring diversity leaders and creating policies to address racial inequality, have stalled or reversed at the same...

Read more: Workers like it when their employers talk about diversity and inclusion

Iran's street art shows defiance, resistance and resilience

  • Written by Pouya Afshar, Associate Professor of Art & Design, UMass Lowell
image'While the teachers are detained, the classrooms will be closed,' reads one artist's painting on a wall.Khiaban Tribune via Instagram

A recent rise in activism in Iran has added a new chapter to the country’s long-standing history of murals and other public art. But as the sentiments being expressed in those works have changed, the...

Read more: Iran's street art shows defiance, resistance and resilience

Giraffes range across diverse African habitats − we’re using GPS, satellites and statistics to track and protect them

  • Written by Michael Brown, Conservation Science Fellow, Smithsonian Institution
imageAn average giraffe has a home range almost as large as Philadelphia.Michael Brown, CC BY-NC

Nearly 6,000 years ago, our ancestors climbed arid rocky outcrops in what is now the Nigerian Sahara and carved spectacularly intricate, larger-than-life renditions of giraffes into the exposed sandstone. The remarkably detailed Dabous giraffe rock art...

Read more: Giraffes range across diverse African habitats − we’re using GPS, satellites and statistics to...

With 'Goodbye Mary,' Molly Tuttle extends country music's lineage of reproductive rights songs to the post-Roe era

  • Written by William Nash, Professor of American Studies and English and American Literatures, Middlebury
imageMolly Tuttle is a rising star in American roots music.Amy Harris/Invision/AP

Jason Aldean’s song “Try That In A Small Town” extols small towns as bastions of conservative values standing up against a litany of violent big-city bogeymen. The song, and the backlash against it, threatens to strengthen popular conceptions about the...

Read more: With 'Goodbye Mary,' Molly Tuttle extends country music's lineage of reproductive rights songs to...

What can cities do to correct racism and help all communities live longer? It starts with city planning

  • Written by Catherine Brinkley, Associate Professor of Human Ecology, University of California, Davis

The average life expectancy in the U.S. is 76.1 years. But this range varies widely – a child raised in wealthy San Mateo County, California, can expect to live nearly 85 years. A child raised in Fort Worth, Texas, could expect to live about 66.7 years.

Race, poverty, as well as related issues like the ability to find nearby grocery stores an...

Read more: What can cities do to correct racism and help all communities live longer? It starts with city...

How individual, ordinary Jews fought Nazi persecution − a new view of history

  • Written by Wolf Gruner, Shapell-Guerin Chair in Jewish Studies and Professor of History; Founding Director, USC Dornsife Center for Advanced Genocide Research, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageLizi Rosenfeld, a Jewish woman, sits on a park bench bearing a sign that reads, 'Only for Aryans,' in August 1938 in Vienna.United States Holocaust Memorial Museum /Provenance: Leo Spitzer, CC BY-SA

In Nazi Germany, Hertha Reis, a 36-year-old Jewish woman, performed forced labor for a private company in Berlin during World War II. In 1941, she was...

Read more: How individual, ordinary Jews fought Nazi persecution − a new view of history

Quran burning in Sweden prompts debate on the fine line between freedom of expression and incitement of hatred

  • Written by Armin Langer, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Florida
imageIraqis raise copies of the Quran during a protest in Baghdad, Iraq, on July 22, 2023, following reports of the burning of the holy book in Copenhagen.AP Photo/Hadi Mizban

The Swedish government is concerned about national security following several incidents involving the burning of the Quran that have provoked demonstrations and outrage from...

Read more: Quran burning in Sweden prompts debate on the fine line between freedom of expression and...

Machines can't always take the heat − two engineers explain the physics behind how heat waves threaten everything from cars to computers

  • Written by Srinivas Garimella, Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageExtreme heat can affect how well machines function, and the fact that many machines give off their own heat doesn't help. AP Photo/Abdeljalil Bounhar

Not only people need to stay cool, especially in a summer of record-breaking heat waves. Many machines, including cellphones, data centers, cars and airplanes, become less efficient and degrade more...

Read more: Machines can't always take the heat − two engineers explain the physics behind how heat waves...

More Articles ...

  1. Prescriptions for fruits and vegetables can improve the health of people with diabetes and other ailments, new study finds
  2. This course examines the dark realities behind your favorite children's stories
  3. This course examines the dark realities behind your favorite children's stories
  4. Hurricane Idalia intensifies over extremely warm Gulf waters, on track for Florida landfall as a dangerous major hurricane
  5. Hurricane Idalia intensifies over extremely warm Gulf waters, on track for Florida landfall as a dangerous major hurricane
  6. The US and China may be ending an agreement on science and technology cooperation − a policy expert explains what this means for research
  7. The US and China may be ending an agreement on science and technology cooperation − a policy expert explains what this means for research
  8. What social change movements can learn from fly fishing: The value of a care-focused message
  9. What social change movements can learn from fly fishing: The value of a care-focused message
  10. Shutting off power to reduce wildfire risk on windy days isn’t a simple decision – an energy expert explains the trade-offs electric utilities face
  11. Shutting off power to reduce wildfire risk on windy days isn’t a simple decision – an energy expert explains the trade-offs electric utilities face
  12. Judicial orders restricting Trump's speech seek to balance his own constitutional rights
  13. Judicial orders restricting Trump's speech seek to balance his own constitutional rights
  14. There's no age limit for politicians − as people live longer, should that change?
  15. There's no age limit for politicians − as people live longer, should that change?
  16. Medication can help you make the most of therapy − a psychologist and neuroscientist explains how
  17. Medication can help you make the most of therapy − a psychologist and neuroscientist explains how
  18. FDA's greenlighting of maternal RSV vaccine represents a major step forward in protecting young babies against the virus
  19. FDA's greenlighting of maternal RSV vaccine represents a major step forward in protecting young babies against the virus
  20. Short naps can improve memory, increase productivity, reduce stress and promote a healthier heart
  21. Short naps can improve memory, increase productivity, reduce stress and promote a healthier heart
  22. Why do fingers get wrinkly after a long bath or swim? A biomedical engineer explains
  23. Why do fingers get wrinkly after a long bath or swim? A biomedical engineer explains
  24. Gospel singer Mahalia Jackson made a suggestion during the 1963 March on Washington − and it changed a good speech to a majestic sermon on an American dream
  25. Trump out on bail – a criminal justice expert explains the system of cash bail
  26. How some Muslim and non-Muslim rappers alike embrace Islam's greeting of peace
  27. Screen time is contributing to chronic sleep deprivation in tweens and teens – a pediatric sleep expert explains how critical sleep is to kids' mental health
  28. AI scores in the top percentile of creative thinking
  29. How educational research could play a greater role in K-12 school improvement
  30. India's Chandrayaan-3 landed on the south pole of the Moon − a space policy expert explains what this means for India and the global race to the Moon
  31. Campus sexual assault prevention programs could do more to prevent violence, even after a decade-long federal mandate
  32. Waves of strikes rippling across the US seem big, but the total number of Americans walking off the job remains historically low
  33. 8 GOP candidates debate funding to Ukraine, Trump's future and -- covertly, with dog whistles -- race
  34. Wagner group's Yevgeny Prigozhin reportedly died in private jet crash – if confirmed, it wouldn't be first time someone who crossed Putin met a suspicious demise
  35. Secrets of the Octopus Garden: Moms nest at thermal springs to give their young the best chance for survival
  36. Living with wildfire: How to protect more homes as fire risk rises in a warming climate
  37. First Republican debate set to kick off without Trump – but with the potential to direct the GOP's foreign policy stance
  38. Cameras in the court: Why most Trump trials won’t be televised
  39. This university class uses color and emotion to explore the end of life
  40. Want to help Maui's animals after the wildfires? Send cash, not kibble
  41. Geoengineering sounds like a quick climate fix, but without more research and guardrails, it's a costly gamble − with potentially harmful results
  42. Social media algorithms warp how people learn from each other, research shows
  43. AI and new standards promise to make scientific data more useful by making it reusable and accessible
  44. Caroline Herschel was England's first female professional astronomer, but still lacks name recognition two centuries later
  45. Nagorno-Karabakh blockade crisis: Choking of disputed region is a consequence of war and geopolitics
  46. Georgia indictment and post-Civil War history make it clear: Trump's actions have already disqualified him from the presidency
  47. Risk of death related to pregnancy and childbirth more than doubled between 1999 and 2019 in the US, new study finds
  48. What Florida gets wrong about George Washington and the benefits he received from enslaving Black people
  49. Can coffee or a nap make up for sleep deprivation? A psychologist explains why there's no substitute for shut-eye
  50. New data reveal US space economy's output is shrinking – an economist explains in 3 charts