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A Detroit street is named in honor of Vincent Chin – his death mobilized Asian American activists nationwide

  • Written by Jennifer Ho, Professor of Asian American Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
imagePeterboro Street was recently renamed Vincent Chin Street in his memory.Valaurian Waller/The Conversation, CC BY-ND

The legacy of Vincent Chin has recently been commemorated in a street sign bearing his name on the corner of Cass Avenue and Peterboro Street in Detroit’s historic Chinatown.

I was glad to see it. Watching the 1987 documentary...

Read more: A Detroit street is named in honor of Vincent Chin – his death mobilized Asian American activists...

Tit-for-tat gerrymandering wars won’t end soon – what happens in Texas and California doesn’t stay there

  • Written by Gibbs Knotts, Professor of Political Science, Coastal Carolina University
imageTexas state Rep. Gene Wu, D-Houston, during debate over a redrawn U.S. congressional map, Aug. 20, 2025, in Austin. AP Photo/Eric Gay

Congressional redistricting – the process of drawing electoral districts to account for population changes – was conceived by the Founding Fathers as a once-per-decade redrawing of district lines...

Read more: Tit-for-tat gerrymandering wars won’t end soon – what happens in Texas and California doesn’t stay...

Wildfire disasters are increasingly in the news, yet less land is burning globally – here’s why

  • Written by Mojtaba Sadegh, Associate Professor of Civil Engineering; Senior Fellow at the United Nations University Institute for Water, Environment and Health, Boise State University
imageResidents try to put out flames as a wildfire threatens homes in Quito, Ecuador, in September 2024.AP Photo/Dolores Ochoa

Worldwide, an estimated 440 million people were exposed to a wildfire encroaching on their home at some point between 2002 and 2021, new research shows. That’s roughly equivalent to the entire population of the European...

Read more: Wildfire disasters are increasingly in the news, yet less land is burning globally – here’s why

By ‘focusing on the family,’ James Dobson helped propel US evangelicals back into politics – making the Religious Right into the cultural force it is today

  • Written by Richard Flory, Executive Director, Center for Religion and Civic Culture, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageJames Dobson, founder of Focus on the Family, participates in the National Day of Prayer ceremony at the White House on May 3, 2007.Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

For decades, one name was ubiquitous in American evangelical homes: Focus on the Family. A media empire with millions of listeners and readers, its messages about parenting, marriage and...

Read more: By ‘focusing on the family,’ James Dobson helped propel US evangelicals back into politics –...

Parenting strategies are shifting as neuroscience brings the developing brain into clearer focus

  • Written by Nancy L. Weaver, Professor of Behavioral Science, Saint Louis University
imageGrocery stores are a common source of tantrums and meltdowns.Cavan Images/Cavan via Getty Images

A friend offhandedly told me recently, “It’s so easy to get my daughter to behave after her birthday – there are so many new toys to take away when she’s bad!”

While there is certainly an appeal to such a powerful parenting...

Read more: Parenting strategies are shifting as neuroscience brings the developing brain into clearer focus

Studying philosophy does make people better thinkers, according to new research on more than 600,000 college grads

  • Written by Michael Vazquez, Teaching Assistant Professor of Philosophy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
imageStudents take a philosophy test in Strasbourg, France, on June 18, 2024.Frederick Florin/AFP via Getty Images

Philosophy majors rank higher than all other majors on verbal and logical reasoning, according to our new study published in the Journal of the American Philosophical Association. They also tend to display more intellectual virtues such as...

Read more: Studying philosophy does make people better thinkers, according to new research on more than...

Why America still needs public schools

  • Written by Sidney Shapiro, Professor of Law, Wake Forest University

While the White House’s fight with elite universities such as Columbia and Harvard has recently dominated the headlines, the feud overshadows the broader and more far-reaching assault on K-12 public education by the Trump administration and many states.

The Trump administration has gutted the Department of Education, imperiling efforts to prot...

Read more: Why America still needs public schools

Hulk Hogan’s daughter can’t write herself out of the wrestler’s will – but she can refuse to take his money

  • Written by Reid Kress Weisbord, Distinguished Professor of Law and Judge Norma Shapiro Scholar, Rutgers University - Newark
imageThe outspoken wrestler attends a news conference in 2014.Dimitrios Kambouris/Getty Images

When professional wrestler and former reality TV star Hulk Hogan died on July 24, 2025, he left behind a grieving widow, two ex-wives, two children, two grandchildren he reportedly never met and a US$25 million fortune. He was 71 years old and died after...

Read more: Hulk Hogan’s daughter can’t write herself out of the wrestler’s will – but she can refuse to take...

State Department layoffs could hurt US companies’ ability to compete globally – an economist explains why

  • Written by Carey Durkin Treado, Associate Teaching Professor of Economics, University of Pittsburgh

When more than 1,300 people at the U.S. State Department lost their jobs in a mass firing this summer, most headlines focused on what it meant for American diplomacy. But the layoffs are about more than embassies and foreign policy – they could also make it harder for U.S. companies to compete in global markets.

The July layoffs – part...

Read more: State Department layoffs could hurt US companies’ ability to compete globally – an economist...

More Articles ...

  1. Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Born to Run’ still speaks to a nation vacillating between hope and despair
  2. Pediatricians’ association recommends COVID-19 vaccines for toddlers and some older children, breaking with CDC guidance
  3. The Orwellian echoes in Trump’s push for ‘Americanism’ at the Smithsonian
  4. Most air cleaning devices have not been tested on people − and little is known about their potential harms, new study finds
  5. AI has passed the aesthetic Turing Test − and it’s changing our relationship with art
  6. Colorado’s subalpine wetlands may be producing a toxic form of mercury – that’s a concern for downstream water supplies
  7. Before celebrating big gifts, charities must watch out for fake donors
  8. Trump administration has proven no friend to organized labor, from attacking federal unions to paralyzing the National Labor Relations Board
  9. In a closely divided Congress, aging lawmakers are a problem for Democrats
  10. Even if Trump succeeds in bringing Putin and Zelenskyy together, don’t expect wonders − their only previous face-to-face encounter ended in failure
  11. What an old folktale can teach us about the ‘annoying persistence’ of political comedians
  12. Data centers consume massive amounts of water – companies rarely tell the public exactly how much
  13. Chaos gardening – wild beauty, or just a mess? A sustainable landscape specialist explains the trend
  14. One of Hurricane Katrina’s most important lessons isn’t about storm preparations – it’s about injustice
  15. Misspelled names may give brands a Lyft – if the spelling isn’t too weird
  16. Reverse discrimination? In spite of the MAGA bluster over DEI, data shows white Americans are still advantaged
  17. Alaska summit and its afterlife provides a glimpse into what peace looks like to Putin and Trump
  18. 1 in 5 Bolivians spoiled their ballots – a sign of voter dissatisfaction as nation tips to the right
  19. AI is about to radically alter military command structures that haven’t changed much since Napoleon’s army
  20. Some pro athletes keep getting better as they age − neuroscience can explain how they stay sharp
  21. Data-driven early intervention strategies could revolutionize Philly’s approach to crime prevention
  22. Data that taxpayers have paid for and rely on is disappearing – here’s how it’s happening and what you can do about it
  23. Do people dream in color or black and white?
  24. NASA wants to put a nuclear reactor on the Moon by 2030 – choosing where is tricky
  25. At one elite college, over 80% of students now use AI – but it’s not all about outsourcing their work
  26. Twelver Shiism – a branch of Islam that serves both as a spiritual and political force in Iran and beyond
  27. Cultivating for color: The hidden trade-offs between garden aesthetics and pollinator preferences
  28. Trump-Putin summit: Veteran diplomat explains why putting peace deal before ceasefire wouldn’t end Russia-Ukraine war
  29. Why universities are hiring more chief marketing officers – even as budgets shrink
  30. Kids need soft skills in the age of AI, but what does this mean for schools?
  31. Grand Canyon’s Dragon Bravo megafire shows the growing wildfire threat to water systems
  32. RFK Jr.’s plans to overhaul ‘vaccine court’ system would face legal and scientific challenges
  33. Protestant ideas shaped Americans’ support for birth control – and the Supreme Court ruling protecting a husband and wife’s right to contraception
  34. When workers’ lives outside work are more fulfilling, it benefits employers too
  35. Sanctuary cities in the US were born in the 1980s as Central American refugees fled civil wars
  36. Afghans in US face uncertainty after the cancellation of their humanitarian relief
  37. The growing fad of ‘microdosing’ mushrooms is leading to an uptick in poison control center calls and emergency room visits
  38. Why rural Coloradans feel ignored − a resentment as old as America itself
  39. ‘It’s a complicated time to be a white Southerner’ − and their views on race reflect that
  40. Older Americans are using AI − study shows how and what they think of it
  41. Genomics can help insect farmers avoid pitfalls of domestication
  42. Exactly what is in the Ivy League deals with the Trump administration – and how they compare
  43. The paradox of pluralism: How college shapes students’ views of other religions
  44. Crowdfunded companies are ‘ghosting’ their investors – and getting away with it
  45. Glacial lake flood hits Juneau, Alaska, reflecting a growing global risk as mountain glaciers melt
  46. Climate models reveal how human activity may be locking the Southwest into permanent drought
  47. COVID-19 vaccines for kids are mired in uncertainty amid conflicting federal guidance
  48. Mindfulness is gaining traction in American schools – but it isn’t clear what students are learning
  49. Where America’s CO emissions come from – what you need to know, in charts
  50. Don’t write off the Putin-Trump summit just yet – its outcome might confound critics