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How debate about gender identity could undermine global efforts to protect victims of violence

  • Written by Jenna Norosky, Postdoctoral Fellow at the Institute for Genocide and Mass Atrocity Prevention, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageA transgender woman takes part in an International Day For The Elimination Of Violence Against Women demonstration in El Salvador on Nov. 25, 2019.Camilo Freedman/APHOTOGRAFIA/Getty Images)

Aided by the Trump administration, debate over gender identity has gone from being a touchstone of domestic culture wars to infiltrating the work of...

Read more: How debate about gender identity could undermine global efforts to protect victims of violence

A justice department opinion arguing the Presidential Records Act is unconstitutional could revert the nation to a time when presidents freely burned their papers

  • Written by Austin Sarat, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science, Amherst College
imageAt least one past president burned his papers.Stephen Hyun/Getty Images

Prior to 1978, U.S. presidents could do what they pleased with the records from their time in office. They owned them.

But in 1978, the Presidential Records Act established new rules for the official records of a president. Passed in the wake of Watergate, when President Richard...

Read more: A justice department opinion arguing the Presidential Records Act is unconstitutional could revert...

What if Texas’ destructive Tax Day flood had centered on inner Houston instead? It’s why cities should plan for the improbable

  • Written by James R. Elliott, Professor of Sociology, Rice University
imageA couple battle floodwaters as they evacuate their Houston apartment complex on April 18, 2016.AP Photo/David J. Phillip

Ten years ago, the infamous Tax Day storm swamped the Houston area with off-the-charts rainfall. Nearly 2 feet of rain fell in less than 15 hours in parts of the region, starting on April 17, 2016. The rain flooded thousands of...

Read more: What if Texas’ destructive Tax Day flood had centered on inner Houston instead? It’s why cities...

New federal figures reveal 1 in 3 US households struggle to pay energy bills, but the reality is likely even worse

  • Written by Diana Hernández, Associate Professor of Sociomedical Sciences, Columbia University
imageEnergy costs are hitting more American households harder than in past years.Olga Rolenko/Moment via Getty Images

Americans’ concerns about being able to afford electricity and home heating fuel are elevated since the beginning of the Iran war. But newly released nationwide data shows that even before the war began, these concerns were...

Read more: New federal figures reveal 1 in 3 US households struggle to pay energy bills, but the reality is...

Using atomic nuclei could allow scientists to read time more precisely than ever – what this research could mean for future clocks

  • Written by Eric R. Hudson, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, University of California, Los Angeles
imageAtomic clocks exploit the properties of atoms to create incredibly precise 'ticks.'Nate Phillips, NIST

Most clocks, from wristwatches to the systems that run GPS and the internet, work by tracking regular, repeating motions.

To build a clock, you need something that ticks in a perfectly repeatable way. In a pendulum clock, that tick is the regular...

Read more: Using atomic nuclei could allow scientists to read time more precisely than ever – what this...

What if Texas’ destructive Tax Day storm had centered on inner Houston instead? It’s why cities should plan for the improbable

  • Written by James R. Elliott, Professor of Sociology, Rice University
imageA couple battle floodwaters as they evacuate their Houston apartment complex on April 18, 2016.AP Photo/David J. Phillip

Ten years ago, the infamous Tax Day storm swamped the Houston area with off-the-charts rainfall. Nearly 2 feet of rain fell in less than 15 hours in parts of the region, starting on April 17, 2016. The rain flooded thousands of...

Read more: What if Texas’ destructive Tax Day storm had centered on inner Houston instead? It’s why cities...

Industries most exposed to AI are not only seeing productivity gains but jobs and wage growth too

  • Written by Christos Makridis, Associate Research Professor of Information Systems, Arizona State University; Institute for Humane Studies
imageFinancial analysis is an industry that is seeing job growth even as AI is increasingly used. Orientfootage/iStock via Getty Images

Forecasts of the impact of artificial intelligence range from the apocalyptic to the utopian. An October 2025 report from Senate Democrats, for example, predicted AI will destroy millions of U.S. jobs. A couple of years...

Read more: Industries most exposed to AI are not only seeing productivity gains but jobs and wage growth too

Why rural hospitals in Pennsylvania and across the country are closing in increasing numbers – 5 myths about rural health care

  • Written by Shayann Ramedani, Research Collaborator at the Clinical and Translational Science Institute, Penn State
imageCuts to federal funding for Medicaid will disproportionately affect reimbursements to rural hospitals.Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Some Pennsylvania hospitals are being pushed beyond the brink of closure.

Taylor Hospital in Ridley Park closed in April 2025, Crozer-Chester Medical Center in Upland closed in May 2025, and...

Read more: Why rural hospitals in Pennsylvania and across the country are closing in increasing numbers – 5...

Trump’s exchange with Pope Leo reflects deep-rooted tensions between the Vatican and the United States: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Kalpana Jain, Senior Religion + Ethics Editor, Director of the Global Religion Journalism Initiative, The Conversation
imagePope Leo XIV speaks to journalists aboard his flight bound for Algiers on April 13, 2026. Alberto Pizzoli/Pool Photo via AP

President Donald Trump and Pope Leo XIV, the U.S.-born head of the Catholic Church, had an unusual and acrimonious public exchange over the weekend.

In a scathing attack on Truth Social, the social media platform he launched in...

Read more: Trump’s exchange with Pope Leo reflects deep-rooted tensions between the Vatican and the United...

How a new mapping tool helps Florida planners protect wildlife corridors as the state grows

  • Written by Sarah Lockhart, PhD Candidate, Interdisciplinary Ecology, University of Florida
imageAs Florida's human population grows, wildlife increasingly has nowhere to go.Benjamin Klinger/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Florida added nearly 3 million residents from 2010-2020, making it the fastest-growing state in the United States during that time.

On any given day, a Florida county commission or municipality may approve a new subdivision, a...

Read more: How a new mapping tool helps Florida planners protect wildlife corridors as the state grows

More Articles ...

  1. Cannabis legalization spurs innovation, but not always in ways that benefit patients or public health
  2. AIs have ‘personalities’ – here’s how they affect you more deeply than you may realize
  3. Artemis II crew brought a human eye and storytelling vision to the photos they took on their mission
  4. ‘Bouncing back’ is a myth – resilience means integrating hard experiences into your life story, not ignoring them
  5. 25 million people lost Medicaid after the COVID-19 pandemic — and state policies shaped who stayed covered
  6. Gray whales are dying in San Francisco Bay at an alarming rate – this isn’t normal
  7. The enduring legacy of medieval Christian depictions of Islam in today’s political discourse
  8. District school boards have become political hotbeds for book bans and more – here’s what they actually do
  9. 4 ways the war in Iran has weakened the United States in the great power game
  10. Artemis II crew used modern photography to tell the visual story of their lunar journey – and update some classic Apollo images
  11. Artemis II moonshot reflects a spacefaring vision present in Jules Verne’s 19th-century novel
  12. US ceasefire with Iran: What’s next? A former diplomat explains 3 possible scenarios
  13. In his efforts to remake federal architecture, Trump repudiates the ‘republican ideals’ that have long informed it
  14. I found a new meteor shower, and it comes from an asteroid getting broken down by the Sun
  15. As a philosopher, I’m convinced that Trump isn’t lying − he’s doing something worse
  16. Doctors can refuse to treat LGBTQ+ patients in several states – these religious exemption laws lead to drops in HIV testing
  17. Tobacco is still one of the world’s top killers – here are the key obstacles to enacting generational smoking bans
  18. What declining vaccination rates mean for families in Allegheny County – where 1 in 3 kindergarten classrooms lack herd immunity for measles
  19. Health care sticker shock has become the norm, but talking to your doctor about costs can help you rein it in
  20. After ceasefire, negotiating a lasting deal with Iran would require overcoming regional rivalries and strategic incoherence
  21. 80 years later, scholarship is breaking silence on women’s suffering and strength at Treblinka – including their role in its uprising
  22. It’s OK to love all the bees (the honey bees, too)
  23. We collected data on how 779 Michigan school districts are regulating student cellphones − here are the trends
  24. AI can design and run thousands of lab experiments without human hands. Humanity isn’t ready for the new risks this brings to biology
  25. Psilocybin mushrooms are going mainstream, but scientific research and regulation lag behind
  26. What a Chinese crackdown on corruption meant for Beijing’s high-end restaurant market
  27. Standards-based grading offers a different model of assessing student learning in the classroom
  28. Trump administration’s lawsuits against Harvard and UCLA have roots in a decades-old fight over civil rights law
  29. Pope Leo XIV’s Africa journey: How each stop reflects his message of peace
  30. The good life requires two things, self-knowledge and friends – you can’t have one without the other
  31. Israeli threats to occupy or annex south Lebanon dust off a decades-old playbook
  32. Presidential words can turn the unthinkable into the thinkable − for better or for worse
  33. Philadelphia’s 40-year history of protecting undocumented immigrants began with churches hiding refugees from El Salvador
  34. Mutual aid and self-sufficiency are key to life near USSR’s contaminated nuclear test zone in Kazakhstan
  35. City animals act in the same brazen ways around the world
  36. Water conservation works, but climate change is outpacing it: Phoenix, Denver and Las Vegas offer a glimpse of the future
  37. From a vaccine mascot to business leadership, lessons for the US from Brazil’s public health system in building public trust and keeping it
  38. Why Americans are buying $22 smoothies despite feeling terrible about the economy
  39. When a president is unfit for office, here’s what the Constitution says can happen
  40. Why the Persian Gulf has more oil and gas than anywhere else on Earth
  41. ¡Ándale! ¡Arriba! Speedy Gonzales set to make his triumphant return to the silver screen
  42. Hosting the NFL draft is less about weekend beer sales and more about long-term brand value
  43. Israel’s death penalty law has little to do with criminal justice and everything to do with ethno-nationalism
  44. 1776’s Declaration of Independence inspired Washington’s troops to fight against the odds – and also helped bring in powerful allies
  45. US refugee policy for white South Africans is part of a century-long effort to keep some English-speaking nations white
  46. AI is reengineering drug discovery by speeding up testing and scanning petabytes of data for connections between diseases
  47. Massive eye drop recall reflects ongoing issues with manufacturing and FDA inspection
  48. We teach at a Florida university that agreed to cooperate with ICE – and we worry that it is making our students feel less safe
  49. How does spider venom damage human cells? Researchers uncover the killer mechanism of recluse spider toxin
  50. Hormuz closure threatens the global food supply – why grocery price hikes are coming