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#StopThisShame, #GirlsAtDhaba, #WhyLoiter and more: women's fight against sexual harassment didn't start with #MeToo

  • Written by Alka Kurian, Senior Lecturer, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington, Bothell
Indian women hold protests against sexual violence.AP Photo/Ajit Solanki, File

Just two months after allegations of sexual abuse against Hollywood film mogul Harvey Weinstein came to light in a 2017 New York Times article, women in at least 85 countriesbegan using the the hashtag #MeToo, to speak against sexual harassment.

In China, sexual...

Read more: #StopThisShame, #GirlsAtDhaba, #WhyLoiter and more: women's fight against sexual harassment didn't...

Once captives of Boko Haram, these students are finding new meaning in their lives in Pennsylvania

  • Written by Jacob Udo-Udo Jacob, Visiting International Scholar in International Studies & Political Science, Dickinson College
Chibok schoolgirls freed from Boko Haram captivity shown in Abuja, Nigeria in 2017.Olamikan Gbemiga/AP

Of all the challenges faced by people who’ve been displaced, perhaps none is more important than to find new meaning in their lives. And so it is with the four young women who are students in a college prep class that I teach at Dickinson...

Read more: Once captives of Boko Haram, these students are finding new meaning in their lives in Pennsylvania

How to prevent the 'robot apocalypse' from ending labor as we know it

  • Written by Thomas Kochan, Professor of Management, Co-Director of the MIT Sloan Institute for Work and Employment Research, MIT Sloan School of Management
Fears of robots taking nearly half of human occupations have been overblown.Mykola Holyutyak/Shutterstock.com

It seems not a day goes by without the appearance of another dire warning about the future of work.

Some alarmists fear a “robot apocalypse,” while others foresee the day of “singularity” coming when artificial...

Read more: How to prevent the 'robot apocalypse' from ending labor as we know it

Artificial intelligence must know when to ask for human help

  • Written by Sarah Scheffler, Ph.D. Student in Computer Science, Boston University
Sometimes the questions become too much for artificial intelligence systems.sdecoret/Shutterstock.com

Artificial intelligence systems are powerful tools for businesses and governments to process data and respond to changing situations, whether on the stock market or on a battlefield. But there are still some things AI isn’t ready for.

We are sc...

Read more: Artificial intelligence must know when to ask for human help

Long before #MeToo, women in many parts of the world organized successful campaigns against sexual violence

  • Written by Alka Kurian, Senior Lecturer, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington, Bothell
Indian women hold protests against sexual violence.AP Photo/Ajit Solanki, File

Just two months after allegations of sexual abuse against Hollywood film mogul Harvey Weinstein came to light in a 2017 New York Times article, women in at least 85 countriesbegan using the the hashtag #MeToo, to speak against sexual harassment.

In China, sexual...

Read more: Long before #MeToo, women in many parts of the world organized successful campaigns against sexual...

Brazil and Venezuela clash over migrants, humanitarian aid and closed borders

  • Written by Robert Muggah, Associate Lecturer, Pontifical Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro (PUC-Rio)
Clashes between opposition protesters and Venezuelan soldiers at the Venezuela-Brazil border have killed an estimated 25 people.AP Photo/Edmar Barros

Venezuela’s borders are now dangerous flashpoints in a tense showdown between President Nicolas Maduro and Venezuela’s self-declared interim president, Juan Guaidó.

The United...

Read more: Brazil and Venezuela clash over migrants, humanitarian aid and closed borders

A prison program in Connecticut seeks to find out what happens when prisoners are treated as victims

  • Written by Miriam Gohara, Clinical Associate Professor of Law, Yale University
Former Connecticut Gov. Dannel P. Malloy speaks with inmates.AP Photo/Pat Eaton-Robb

Prisons are full of people who were once victims of violence and abuse.

As many as 75 percent of people who are in prison have experienced violence or childhood neglect, according to data from the Department of Justice.

Prisoners report past abuse at rates up to twice...

Read more: A prison program in Connecticut seeks to find out what happens when prisoners are treated as victims

A cure for HIV? Feasible but not yet realized

  • Written by Allison Webel, Assistant Professor of Nursing, Case Western Reserve University
The human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), shown here as tiny purple spheres, causes the disease known as AIDS. Mark Ellisman and Tom Deerinck, National Center for Microscopy and Imaging Research

This week a team of scientists and physicians from the U.K. published news of a second HIV positive man, in London, who is in long-term (18-month) HIV...

Read more: A cure for HIV? Feasible but not yet realized

Hoda Muthana wants to come home from Syria – just like many loyalist women who fled to Canada during the American Revolution

  • Written by G. Patrick O'Brien, PhD Candidate in History, University of South Carolina
Hoda Muthana and child during an interview with 'CBS This Morning.'CBS News screenshot

American emigrant Hoda Muthana begged American authorities last month to let her return to the United States.

Muthana, who was 19 when she left her family in Alabama in 2014 to join the proclaimed Islamic State caliphate, married three IS fighters after her...

Read more: Hoda Muthana wants to come home from Syria – just like many loyalist women who fled to Canada...

US takes tentative steps toward opening up government data

  • Written by Anjanette Raymond, Associate Professor of Business Law and Ethics; Director, Program on Data Management and Information Governance, Ostrom Workshop, Indiana University
Open data offers great promise, but also some risk.rawf8/shutterstock.com

At the beginning of this year, President Trump signed into law the Open, Public, Electronic and Necessary Government Data Act, requiring that nonsensitive government data be made available in machine-readable, open formats by default.

As researcherswhostudy data governance and...

Read more: US takes tentative steps toward opening up government data

More Articles ...

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  5. Ensuring racial equality – from classrooms to workplaces – depends on federal regulations Trump could roll back
  6. Opioid crisis shows partnering with industry can be bad for public health
  7. #MeToo whistleblowing is upending A century-old legal precedent in US demanding loyalty to the boss
  8. 4 things to know about Ash Wednesday
  9. #MeToo whistleblowing is upending century-old legal precedent demanding loyalty to the boss
  10. The struggle for coal miners’ health care and pension benefits continues
  11. Mining the Moon
  12. Autonomous drones can help search and rescue after disasters
  13. America's schools are crumbling – what will it take to fix them?
  14. What will come after a US withdrawal from Afghanistan?
  15. Kashmir conflict is not just a border dispute between India and Pakistan
  16. El origen de los cócteles artesanales es la Ley seca
  17. A letter from Beth Daley
  18. Purdue Pharma taps a Gilded Age history of pharmaceutical fraud
  19. Abortions rise worldwide when US cuts funding to women's health clinics, study finds
  20. Teacher unions say they're fighting for students and schools – what they really want is more members
  21. Netanyahu’s hardline foreign policies may outlast his tenure
  22. 5 ways life would be better if it were always daylight saving time
  23. Fyre debacle shows how smaller acts can get burned in modern music festival economy
  24. Lightweight of periodic table plays big role in life on Earth
  25. EPA's plan to regulate chemical contaminants in drinking water is a drop in the bucket
  26. After Cardinal Pell’s conviction, can a tradition-bound church become more accountable?
  27. Is it more dangerous to let Islamic State foreign fighters from the West return or prevent them from coming back?
  28. Your lungs are really amazing. An anatomy professor explains why
  29. What makes natural gas bottlenecks happen during extreme cold snaps
  30. Why Congress needs to make child care more affordable – 5 questions answered
  31. How SpaceX lowered costs and reduced barriers to space
  32. Trump-Kim summit ends with no deal, but diplomacy is a long process
  33. Crisis de Venezuela: amenazas de Trump a Maduro evocan la historia sangrienta de la intervención de EEUU en América Latina
  34. Crisis de Venezuela: las amenazas de Trump a Maduro evocan la historia sangrienta de la intervención de EEUU en América Latina
  35. What Michael Cohen's betrayal reveals about our messed-up workplace loyalties
  36. 'Micro snails' we scraped from sidewalk cracks help unlock details of ancient earth's biological evolution
  37. How being beautiful influences your attitudes toward sex
  38. What drives the appeal of 'Passion of the Christ' and other films on the life of Jesus
  39. A new way to pay for innovative drugs, provide universal access and not break the bank
  40. Listening in to brain communications, without surgery
  41. Why wealth equality remains out of reach for black Americans
  42. Sequencing the white shark genome is cool, but for bigger insights we need libraries of genetic data
  43. 3 reasons why people fall for politicians' lies about statistics
  44. Michael Cohen's testimony on Trump business reveals conduct that's widespread in corporate America
  45. Michael Cohen's verbal somersault, 'I lied, but I'm not a liar,' translated by a rhetoric expert
  46. Cuba actualiza su Constitución, expandiendo derechos pero posponiendo cambios radicales
  47. What Catholic Church records tell us about America's earliest black history
  48. 3 things schools should teach about America's history of white supremacy
  49. China is catching up to the US on artificial intelligence research
  50. Will terrorism continue to decline in 2019?