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Who can defend voting rights? An appeals court ruling sharply limiting lawsuits looks likely to head to the Supreme Court

  • Written by Anthony Michael Kreis, Assistant Professor of Law, Georgia State University
imageThe recent court decision about the Voting Rights Act could be a setback for people's right to vote.Stefani Reynolds/AFP via Getty Images

A federal appeals court in Arkansas ruled on Monday, Nov. 20, 2023, that only the federal government – not private citizens or civil rights groups – could sue to enforce the 1965 Voting Rights Act.

Thi...

Read more: Who can defend voting rights? An appeals court ruling sharply limiting lawsuits looks likely to...

Lizards, fish and other species are evolving with climate change, but not fast enough

  • Written by Michael P. Moore, Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Colorado Denver
imageTemperature sensitivity makes western fence lizards vulnerable to climate change.Greg Shine/BLM, CC BY

Climate change is threatening the survival of plants and animals around the globe as temperatures rise and habitats change.

Some species have been able to meet the challenge with rapid evolutionary adaptation and other changes in behavior or...

Read more: Lizards, fish and other species are evolving with climate change, but not fast enough

Lizards, insects and other species are evolving with climate change, but not fast enough

  • Written by Michael P. Moore, Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Colorado Denver
imageTemperature sensitivity makes western fence lizards vulnerable to climate change.Greg Shine/BLM, CC BY

Climate change is threatening the survival of plants and animals around the globe as temperatures rise and habitats change.

Some species have been able to meet the challenge with rapid evolutionary adaptation and other changes in behavior or...

Read more: Lizards, insects and other species are evolving with climate change, but not fast enough

How do viruses get into cells? Their infection tactics determine whether they can jump species or set off a pandemic

  • Written by Peter Kasson, Professor of Molecular Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia
imageSurface proteins on a virus enable it to attach to and get inside a cell to start replicating.koto_feja/E+ via Getty Images

COVID-19, flu, mpox, noroviral diarrhea: How do the viruses that cause these diseases actually infect you?

Viruses cannot replicate on their own, so they must infect cells in your body to make more copies of themselves. The...

Read more: How do viruses get into cells? Their infection tactics determine whether they can jump species or...

West Bank's settler violence problem is a second sign that Israel's policy of ignoring Palestinians' drive for a homeland isn't a long-term solution

  • Written by Dana El Kurd, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Richmond
imageIsraeli soldiers patrol the Palestinian Bedouin village of Tala (Thala) in the occupied West Bank on Oct. 26, 2023, after residents were attacked by Israeli settlers the same day.HOMAS COEX/AFP via Getty Images

With violence and destruction raging in southern Israel and Gaza, there has been less attention on the worsening violence in the West Bank,...

Read more: West Bank's settler violence problem is a second sign that Israel's policy of ignoring...

What would it take for a cease-fire to happen in Gaza?

  • Written by Laurie Nathan, Professor of the Practice of Mediation, University of Notre Dame

Calls for a cease-fire and other limits on military operations and violence were made by governments, advocacygroups and political leaders around the world almost immediately after the Oct. 7, 2023, massacre of 1,200 Israeli civilians by Hamas. Israel immediately declared war on Hamas and began shelling and then invaded Gaza, leading to more than...

Read more: What would it take for a cease-fire to happen in Gaza?

Gaza's next tragedy: Disease risk spreads amid overcrowded shelters, dirty water and breakdown of basic sanitation

  • Written by Yara M. Asi, Assistant Professor of Global Health Management and Informatics, University of Central Florida

After more than a month of being subjected to sustained bombing, the besieged people of the Gaza Strip are now confronted with another threat to life: disease.

Overcrowding at shelters, a breakdown of basic sanitation, the rising number of unburied dead and a scarcity of clean drinking water have left the enclave “on the precipice of major...

Read more: Gaza's next tragedy: Disease risk spreads amid overcrowded shelters, dirty water and breakdown of...

Shows like 'Scandal' and 'Madam Secretary' inspire women to become involved in politics in real life

  • Written by Jennifer Hoewe, Associate professor, Purdue University
imageNetflix's show 'The Diplomat' is one of the few with strong female leads in politics.Brian van der Brug/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

Hillary Clinton famously did not win the 2016 election and become the first female U.S. president. Yet Clinton’s presidential campaign still resonated with many women who have said it made them more...

Read more: Shows like 'Scandal' and 'Madam Secretary' inspire women to become involved in politics in real life

'Time warp' takes students to Native American past to search for solutions for the future

  • Written by Eric M. Anderman, Professor of Educational Psychology and Quantitative Research, Evaluation, and Measurement, The Ohio State University
imageStudents become more emotionally engaged with history when it's presented in an interactive way, research shows.SDI Productions via Getty Images

The eyes of the fifth graders in Ms. Evans’ class widened as they saw a dazzling light on the classroom smartboard and the phrase, “Let’s do the Time Warp!”

Ms. Evans, who teaches at...

Read more: 'Time warp' takes students to Native American past to search for solutions for the future

This Thanksgiving − and on any holiday − these steps will help prevent foodborne illness

  • Written by Kimberly Baker, Food Systems and Safety Program Team Director and Assistant Extension Specialist, Clemson University
imageA delicious – and safe – holiday spread involves careful foreplanning and preparation.Lauri Patterson/E+ via Getty Images

Thanksgiving is a time for gathering with friends and family around the dinner table. No one wants to cause their family or friends to get sick from a foodborne illness on this holiday or any other occasion.

The...

Read more: This Thanksgiving − and on any holiday − these steps will help prevent foodborne illness

More Articles ...

  1. In America, national parks are more than scenic − they’re sacred. But they were created at a cost to Native Americans
  2. Thank gluten's complex chemistry for your light, fluffy baked goods
  3. Airlines are frustrating travelers by changing frequent flyer program rules – here's why they keep doing it
  4. Thanksgiving stories gloss over the history of US settlement on Native lands
  5. Good profits from bad news: How the Kennedy assassination helped make network TV news wealthy
  6. Immune health is all about balance – an immunologist explains why both too strong and too weak an immune response can lead to illness
  7. Education linked to better employment prospects upon release from prison
  8. What a biannual gathering of 1967 Impalas reveals about the blurry line between fandom and religion
  9. Every state is about to dole out federal funding for broadband internet – not every state is ready for the task
  10. Pooling multiple models during COVID-19 pandemic provided more reliable projections about an uncertain future
  11. Being homeless means not being free − as Americans are supposed to be
  12. How do crystals form?
  13. Don't be fooled by Biden and Xi talks − China and the US are enduring rivals rather than engaged partners
  14. Thanksgiving sides are delicious and can be nutritious − here's the biochemistry of how to maximize the benefits
  15. What is quantum advantage? A quantum computing scientist explains an approaching milestone marking the arrival of extremely powerful computers
  16. Forget ‘Man the Hunter’ – physiological and archaeological evidence rewrites assumptions about a gendered division of labor in prehistoric times
  17. Unthanksgiving Day: A celebration of Indigenous resistance to colonialism, held yearly at Alcatraz
  18. Gettysburg tells the story of more than a battle − the military park shows what national ‘reconciliation’ looked like for decades after the Civil War
  19. 5 marketing lessons from the Taylor Swift and Travis Kelce romance
  20. Hamas isn't the first military group to hide behind civilians as a way to wage war
  21. Fewer U.S. college students are studying a foreign language − and that spells trouble for national security
  22. Colleges face gambling addiction among students as sports betting spreads
  23. Jury convictions of Bannon and Navarro for refusing congressional subpoena may energize lawmakers' ability to hold powerful people accountable
  24. Women's activism in Iran continues, despite street protests dying down in face of state repression
  25. No, you're not that good at detecting fake videos − 2 misinformation experts explain why and how you can develop the power to resist these deceptions
  26. FDA's latest warnings about eye drop contamination put consumers on edge − a team of infectious disease experts explain the risks
  27. 'From the river to the sea' – a Palestinian historian explores the meaning and intent of scrutinized slogan
  28. Volcanic Iceland is rumbling again as magma rises − a geologist explains eruptions in the land of fire and ice
  29. Poor men south of Richmond? Why much of the rural South is in economic crisis
  30. A TikTok Jesus promises divine blessings and many worldly comforts
  31. As the US begins to build offshore wind farms, scientists say many questions remain about impacts on the oceans and marine life
  32. From ancient Greece to Broadway, music has played a critical role in theater
  33. The universe is expanding faster than theory predicts – physicists are searching for new ideas that might explain the mismatch
  34. For decades, mothers have borne the brunt of scrutiny for alcohol use during pregnancy − new research points to dad's drinking as a significant factor in fetal alcohol syndrome
  35. Scientists suspect there's ice hiding on the Moon, and a host of missions from the US and beyond are searching for it
  36. Biden-Xi meeting: 6 essential reads on what to look out for as US, Chinese leaders hold face-to-face talks
  37. 1 in 4 Colorado 11th-graders skipped their state's standardized test − geography and income help explain why
  38. Music painted on the wall of a Venetian orphanage will be heard again nearly 250 years later
  39. Brains have a remarkable ability to rewire themselves following injury − a concussion specialist explains the science behind rehabilitation and recovery
  40. How PFAS 'forever chemicals' are getting into Miami's Biscayne Bay, where dolphins, fish and manatees dine
  41. Insulin injections could one day be replaced with rock music − new research in mice
  42. PFAS 'forever chemicals' are getting into ocean ecosystems, where dolphins, fish and manatees dine – we traced their origins
  43. Dreams of a 'broken up' Russia might turn into a nightmare for the West – and an opportunity for China
  44. Amid 'checkout charity' boom, some Americans are more likely to be impulse givers than others
  45. Mass shootings often put a spotlight on mental illness, but figuring out which conditions should keep someone from having a gun is no easy task
  46. México elegirá pronto a su primera presidenta, pero este hito oculta una marcha desigual hacia los derechos de la mujer
  47. The battle over right to repair is a fight over your car's data
  48. Climate change is altering animal brains and behavior − a neuroscientist explains how
  49. Is time travel even possible? An astrophysicist explains the science behind the science fiction
  50. We studied jail conditions and jail deaths − here's what we found