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Manifesto published in Russian media reflects Putin regime's ruthless plans in Ukraine

  • Written by Susanne Sternthal, Lecturer in Post-Soviet Government and Politics, Texas State University
imageA forensic worker exhumes several bodies from a grave in Bucha, Ukraine, on April 12, 2022. Anastasia Vlasova/Getty Images

Shortly after footage emerged of the carnage Russian troops left behind in the town of Bucha, Ukraine, an article was published April 4, 2022, in one of the largest Russian state-run media companies.

The article called for even...

Read more: Manifesto published in Russian media reflects Putin regime's ruthless plans in Ukraine

Why do peace talks fail? A negotiation expert answers 5 questions about the slim chances for a peace deal between Russia and Ukraine

  • Written by Andrew Blum, Executive Director and Professor of Practice at Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace and Justice Kroc School, University of San Diego
imagePeace activists demonstrate outside the European Commission building on March 22, 2022, in Brussels. Thierry Monasse/Getty Images

Ukraine and Russia have held intermittent peace talks since the end of February 2022, just days after Russia first launched a war.

Russian President Vladimir Putin squashed hope of an imminent peace deal on April 12 when...

Read more: Why do peace talks fail? A negotiation expert answers 5 questions about the slim chances for a...

Corporate do-gooder efforts can boost sales as long as they're tied to corporate harm

  • Written by Dionne A Nickerson, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Indiana University
imageBrands spend billions on the environment and the common good.onurdongel/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Customers spent more buying stuff from companies that engaged in corporate social responsibility than those that didn’t – as long as those do-gooder efforts...

Read more: Corporate do-gooder efforts can boost sales as long as they're tied to corporate harm

Jackie Robinson was a radical – don't listen to the sanitized version of history

  • Written by Peter Dreier, E.P. Clapp Distinguished Professor of Politics, Occidental College
imageJackie Robinson addresses civil rights supporters protesting outside the 1964 GOP National Convention.Ted Streshinsky/Corbis via Getty Images

In our new book, “Baseball Rebels: The Players, People, and Social Movements That Shook Up the Game and Changed America,” Rob Elias and I profile the many iconoclasts, dissenters and mavericks who...

Read more: Jackie Robinson was a radical – don't listen to the sanitized version of history

The information age is starting to transform fishing worldwide

  • Written by Nicholas P. Sullivan, Senior Research Fellow, Fletcher Maritime Studies Program, and Senior Fellow, Council on Emerging Market Enterprises, Tufts University
imageA researcher at the advocacy group Oceana uses GPS data to trace the activity of fishing boats. Eric Baradat/AFP via Getty Images

People in the world’s developed nations live in a post-industrial era, working mainly in service or knowledge industries. Manufacturers increasingly rely on sensors, robots, artificial intelligence and machine...

Read more: The information age is starting to transform fishing worldwide

The FDA approved a new drug to treat Alzheimer's, but Medicare won't always pay for it – a doctor explains what researchers know about Biogen's Aduhelm

  • Written by Andrew Williams, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, Albert Einstein College of Medicine
imageAn illustration of amyloid plaques within the human brain, characteristic features of Alzheimer's. By 2060, approximately 14 million Americans are expected to have the disease.Kateryna Kon/Science Photo Library via Getty Images

Medicare finalized its decision to restrict its coverage of Aduhelm, Biogen’s new Alzheimer’s disease drug, on...

Read more: The FDA approved a new drug to treat Alzheimer's, but Medicare won't always pay for it – a doctor...

A decade of science and trillions of collisions show the W boson is more massive than expected – a physicist on the team explains what it means for the Standard Model

  • Written by John Conway, Professor of Physics, University of California, Davis
imageMeasuring the mass of W bosons took 10 years – and the result was not what physicists expected.PM Images/Digital Vision via Getty Images

“You can do it quickly, you can do it cheaply, or you can do it right. We did it right.” These were some of the opening remarks from David Toback, leader of the Collider Detector at Fermilab, as...

Read more: A decade of science and trillions of collisions show the W boson is more massive than expected – a...

Police presence on school grounds poses potential risks to kids

  • Written by Elizabeth K. Anthony, Associate Professor of Social Work, Arizona State University
imageEvidence shows that students are being arrested for minor misbehavior. Watchara Phomicinda/MediaNews Group/The Press-Enterprise via Getty Images

In fall 2020, I got an email from the Phoenix Elementary School District #1, a K-8 school district, requesting feedback on whether to continue using school resource officers in seven of the...

Read more: Police presence on school grounds poses potential risks to kids

Sacred hares, banished winter witches and pagan worship – the roots of Easter Bunny traditions are ancient

  • Written by Tok Thompson, Professor of Anthropology and Communication, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageChildren celebrating Easter, with their Easter Bunnies and Easter eggs.Sanja Radin/Collection E+ via Getty Images

The Easter Bunny is a much celebrated character in American Easter celebrations. On Easter Sunday, children look for hidden special treats, often chocolate Easter eggs, that the Easter Bunny might have left behind.

As a folklorist,...

Read more: Sacred hares, banished winter witches and pagan worship – the roots of Easter Bunny traditions are...

News media heeding call to limit naming perpetrators in mass shootings

  • Written by Thomas J. Hrach, Associate Professor, Department of Journalism and Strategic Media, University of Memphis
imageAt times taking their lead from police, journalists are naming shooters less often and less prominently.Brad Vest/Getty Images

The day after a man opened fire at a Collierville, Tennessee, grocery store, killing one person and wounding 13 others before turning the gun on himself, local police conducted an impromptu news conference to identify the...

Read more: News media heeding call to limit naming perpetrators in mass shootings

More Articles ...

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  2. What's next for Pakistan after Imran Khan's ouster?
  3. El problema de las viviendas ecológicas que Brad Pitt donó para los sobrevivientes del huracán Katrina
  4. How a coffee company and a marketing maven brewed up a Passover tradition: A brief history of the Maxwell House Haggadah
  5. 'Every day feels unsettled' – educators decry staffing shortage
  6. Do you need a second booster shot? An epidemiologist scoured the latest research and has some answers
  7. Store credit cards generate corporate profits and disgruntled workers
  8. When are book bans unconstitutional? A First Amendment scholar explains
  9. Conservatives feel blamed, shamed and ostracized by the media
  10. Redwood trees have two types of leaves, scientists find – a trait that could help them survive in a changing climate
  11. How math – and eating while running – can help you complete your best marathon
  12. Why 'bad' ads appear on 'good' websites – a computer scientist explains
  13. ALS is only 50% genetic – identifying DNA regions affected by lifestyle and environmental risk factors could help pinpoint avenues for treatment
  14. Russia isn't likely to use chemical weapons in Ukraine – unless Putin grows desperate
  15. Russian ruble's recovery masks disruptive impact of West's sanctions – but it won't make Putin seek peace
  16. Soaring energy costs fuel fastest inflation in 40 years: 3 essential reads
  17. Archaeological site along the Nile opens a window on the Nubian civilization that flourished in ancient Sudan
  18. Abusive bosses often blame a worker's lack of effort or care for poor performance when it's their own biases that may be the problem
  19. Thawing permafrost is roiling the Arctic landscape, driven by a hidden world of changes beneath the surface as the climate warms
  20. Raising cattle on native grasses in the eastern U.S. benefits farmers, wildlife and the soil
  21. Monkeys can sense their own heartbeats, an ability tied to mental health, consciousness and memory in humans
  22. Best Easter pageant ever? Half a century of 'Jesus Christ Superstar'
  23. Psychological tips aren’t enough – policies need to address structural inequities so everyone can flourish
  24. Mismanaged cloud services put user data at risk
  25. Electrifying homes to slow climate change: 4 essential reads
  26. Great white sharks occasionally hunt in pairs - new research sheds light on social behavior of these mysterious predators
  27. Why do cats' eyes glow in the dark?
  28. Water fights, magical decapitated heads and family reunions – the Southeast Asian festival of Songkran has it all
  29. Penance and plague: How the Black Death changed one of Christianity's most important rituals
  30. Will Smith's slap shows 'honor culture' is alive and well
  31. Ukrainian teens' voices from the middle of war: 'You begin to appreciate what was common and boring for you'
  32. Will French presidential election be a case of 'plus ca change, moins ca change?' -- 5 things to watch as nation heads to the poll
  33. To protect wildlife from free-roaming cats, a zone defense may be more effective than trying to get every feline off the street
  34. UN Security Council is powerless to help Ukraine – but it's working as designed to prevent World War III
  35. What is a 529 college savings plan? An economist explains
  36. Fishing, strip clubs and golf: How male-focused networking in medicine blocks female colleagues from top jobs
  37. Your digital footprints are more than a privacy risk – they could help hackers infiltrate computer networks
  38. Pope Francis apologized for the harm done to First Nations peoples, but what does a pope’s apology mean?
  39. Oklahoma state officials resist Supreme Court ruling affirming tribal authority over American Indian country
  40. Ketanji Brown Jackson confirmed as Supreme Court justice: 4 essential reads
  41. Researchers identified over 5,500 new viruses in the ocean, including a missing link in viral evolution
  42. COVID-19: Mental health telemedicine was off to a slow start – then the pandemic happened
  43. 'Is It Cake?' feeds viewers visual catharsis for uncertain times
  44. Bird flu is killing millions of chickens and turkeys across the US
  45. Helping Ukrainians means listening to their needs – 3 lessons for aid groups from Syria's war
  46. The forgotten story of Black soldiers and the Red Ball Express during World War II
  47. How QR codes work and what makes them dangerous – a computer scientist explains
  48. Mental health problems come with an added 'cost' of poorer cognitive function – a neuropsychologist explains
  49. Russia is sparking new nuclear threats – understanding nonproliferation history helps place this in context
  50. Rape by Russian soldiers in Ukraine is the latest example of a despicable wartime crime that spans the globe