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Violent extremists like the Minnesota shooter are not lone wolves

  • Written by Alex Hinton, Distinguished Professor of Anthropology; Director, Center for the Study of Genocide and Human Rights, Rutgers University - Newark
imageA memorial for Minnesota state Rep. Melissa Hortman and her husband, Mark Hortman, is seen at the Minnesota State Capitol building on June 16, 2025, in St. Paul, Minn. Steven Garcia/Getty Images

After a two-day manhunt, Minnesota authorities arrested and charged 57-year-old Vance Boelter on June 15, 2025, after he allegedly shot and killed Minnesot...

Read more: Violent extremists like the Minnesota shooter are not lone wolves

Observers of workplace mistreatment react as strongly as the victims − at times with a surprising amount of victim blaming

  • Written by Jason Colquitt, Professor of Management, Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame
imageWorkplace mistreatment harms observers, too.AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

Picture this: On your way out of the office, you notice a manager berating an employee. You assume the worker made some sort of mistake, but the manager’s behavior seems unprofessional. Later, as you’re preparing dinner, is the scene still weighing on you – or...

Read more: Observers of workplace mistreatment react as strongly as the victims − at times with a surprising...

Precise measurement standards have revolutionized museum science, helping nail down where artifacts are from

  • Written by Edward Vicenzi, Research Scientist, Museum Conservation Institute, Smithsonian Institution
imageMuseums and their bountiful collections are research bastions.Douglas Rissing/iStock via Getty Images

On a cool February morning in 1904, a spark ignited a fire in the heart of downtown Baltimore. Within hours, a raging inferno swept eastward across the harbor district, consuming everything in its path. By evening, the local firefighters were...

Read more: Precise measurement standards have revolutionized museum science, helping nail down where...

AI ‘reanimations’: Making facsimiles of the dead raises ethical quandaries

  • Written by Nir Eisikovits, Professor of Philosophy and Director, Applied Ethics Center, UMass Boston
imageThis screenshot of an AI-generated video depicts Christopher Pelkey, who was killed in 2021.Screenshot: Stacey Wales/YouTube

Christopher Pelkey was shot and killed in a road range incident in 2021. On May 8, 2025, at the sentencing hearing for his killer, an AI video reconstruction of Pelkey delivered a victim impact statement. The trial judge repor...

Read more: AI ‘reanimations’: Making facsimiles of the dead raises ethical quandaries

When you lose your health insurance, you may also lose your primary doctor – and that hurts your health

  • Written by Jane Tavares, Senior Research Fellow and Lecturer of Gerontology, UMass Boston
imageSeeing the same doctor on a regular basis is good for your health.Morsa Images/DigitalVision via Getty Images

When you lose your health insurance or switch to a plan that skimps on preventive care, something critical breaks.

The connection to your primary care provider, usually a doctor, gets severed. You stop getting routine checkups. Warning signs...

Read more: When you lose your health insurance, you may also lose your primary doctor – and that hurts your...

German chancellor’s rebuke of Israel marks a shift in state policy that has long put such criticism out of bounds

  • Written by Elisabeth Weber, Professor, University of California, Santa Barbara
imageGerman Chancellor Friedrich Merz and Israeli President Isaac Herzog prepare to shake hands in Berlin on May 12, 2025.Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Friedrich Merz did something unprecedented for a German chancellor in late May 2025: publicly criticize Israel in unvarnished, unequivocal terms.

“What the Israeli army is doing in the Gaza Strip, I no...

Read more: German chancellor’s rebuke of Israel marks a shift in state policy that has long put such...

A radical proposal to abolish state government and strengthen American democracy

  • Written by Stephen Legomsky, John S. Lehmann University Professor Emeritus, Washington University in St. Louis
imageAbolish all the states? Zoonar/Getty Images Plus

Get rid of states? Legal scholar Stephen Legomsky, who taught for 34 years at the Washington University in St. Louis School of Law, has just published a book, “Reimagining the American Union,” that proposes a radical idea: Abolish state government. The Conversation’s politics and...

Read more: A radical proposal to abolish state government and strengthen American democracy

The use of federal troops to quell Los Angeles protests recalls militarized law enforcement during the Civil Rights Movement

  • Written by Justin Randolph, Assistant Professor of U.S. History, Texas A&M University
imageThe National Guard and protesters stand off outside of a downtown jail in Los Angeles on June 8, 2025.Spencer Platt/Getty Images

President Donald Trump activated 4,000 National Guard troops on June 10, 2025, to quell protests in Los Angeles over immigration raids – without the normal request from the state. He has also sent to Los Angeles hund...

Read more: The use of federal troops to quell Los Angeles protests recalls militarized law enforcement during...

Companies haven’t stopped hiring, but they’re more cautious, according to the 2025 College Hiring Outlook Report

  • Written by Murugan Anandarajan, Professor of Decision Sciences and Management Information Systems, Drexel University
imageRecent college grads face a tough job market in 2025, but employers are still hiring.sturti/E+ via Getty Images

Every year, I tell my students in my business analytics class the same thing: “Don’t just apply for a job. Audition for it.”

This advice seems particularly relevant this year. In today’s turbulent economy, companies...

Read more: Companies haven’t stopped hiring, but they’re more cautious, according to the 2025 College Hiring...

When developing countries band together, lifesaving drugs become cheaper and easier to buy − with trade-offs

  • Written by Lucy Xiaolu Wang, Assistant Professor, Department of Resource Economics, UMass Amherst
imagePooling procurement of drugs could increase the availability of essential treatments around the globe.narvo vexar/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Procuring lifesaving drugs is a daunting challenge in many low- and middle-income countries. Essential treatments are often neither available nor affordable in these nations, even decades after the drugs...

Read more: When developing countries band together, lifesaving drugs become cheaper and easier to buy − with...

More Articles ...

  1. Nostalgic foods and scents like fresh-cut grass and hamburgers grilling bring comfort, connection and well-being
  2. The hidden bias in college admissions tests: How standardized exams can favor privilege over potential
  3. What’s the right way to mark Juneteenth? The newest US holiday is confusing Americans
  4. Iran-Israel ‘threshold war’ has rewritten nuclear escalation rules
  5. Most Americans believe misinformation is a problem — federal research cuts will only make the problem worse
  6. Sleep loss rewires the brain for cravings and weight gain – a neurologist explains the science behind the cycle
  7. Conflicted, disillusioned, disengaged: The unsettled center of Jewish student opinion after Oct. 7
  8. A new book of Edward Gorey’s drawings shows what’s lost when the artist’s sexuality is glossed over
  9. Is Mars really red? A physicist explains the planet’s reddish hue and why it looks different to some telescopes
  10. RNA has newly identified role: Repairing serious DNA damage to maintain the genome
  11. Will AI take your job? The answer could hinge on the 4 S’s of the technology’s advantages over humans
  12. Trade in a mythical fish is threatening real species of rays that are rare and at risk
  13. Millions rally against authoritarianism, while the White House portrays protests as threats – a political scientist explains
  14. Forcible removal of US Sen. Alex Padilla signals a dangerous shift in American democracy
  15. What does Israel’s strike mean for US policy on Iran and prospects for a nuclear deal?
  16. Protecting the vulnerable, or automating harm? AI’s double-edged role in spotting abuse
  17. Sly Stone turned isolation into inspiration, forging a path for a generation of music-makers
  18. Southern Baptists’ call for the US Supreme Court to overturn its same-sex marriage decision is part of a long history of opposing women’s and LGBTQ+ people’s rights
  19. Colorado’s fentanyl criminalization bill won’t solve the opioid epidemic, say the people most affected
  20. Data on sexual orientation and gender is critical to public health – without it, health crises continue unnoticed
  21. Supreme Court ignores precedent instead of overruling it in allowing president to fire officials whom Congress tried to make independent
  22. House tax-and-spending bill and other Trump administration changes could make millions of people lose their health insurance coverage
  23. RFK Jr’s shakeup of vaccine advisory committee raises worries about scientific integrity of health recommendations
  24. Two-state solution in the Middle East has been a core US policy for 25 years – is the Trump administration eyeing a change?
  25. US Army’s image of power and flag-waving rings false to Gen Z weary of gun violence − and long-term recruitment numbers show it
  26. Older adults with dementia misjudge their financial skills – which may make them more vulnerable to fraud, new research finds
  27. AI literacy: What it is, what it isn’t, who needs it and why it’s hard to define
  28. Federal R D funding boosts productivity for the whole economy − making big cuts to such government spending unwise
  29. AI tools collect and store data about you from all your devices – here’s how to be aware of what you’re revealing
  30. Energy Star, on the Trump administration’s target list, has a long history of helping consumers’ wallets and the planet
  31. Adolescents who smoke or vape may believe tobacco’s perceived coping benefits outweigh accepted health risks
  32. How a new bus line in Philadelphia is defying post-pandemic transit trends
  33. From Washington’s burned letters to Trump’s missing transcripts, partial presidential records limit people’s full understanding of history
  34. The complex reality of college student mental health: Data reveals both challenges and positive trends
  35. Video games teach students in this class how religion works in the modern world
  36. A portrait taken in North Philly in the 1980s reconnects poet with cherished memories of her own beloved father
  37. Family homesteads with tangled titles are contributing to rural America’s housing crisis
  38. How your air conditioner can help the power grid, rather than overloading it
  39. Antagonism to transgender rights is tied to the authoritarian desire for social conformity – not just partisan affiliation
  40. Politics based on grievance has a long and violent history in America
  41. How was the wheel invented? Computer simulations reveal the unlikely birth of a world-changing technology nearly 6,000 years ago
  42. We surveyed 1,500 Florida kids about cellphones and their mental health – what we learned suggests school phone bans may have important but limited effects
  43. You’re probably richer than you think because of the safety net – but you’d have more of that hidden wealth if you lived in Norway
  44. A field guide to ‘accelerationism’: White supremacist groups using violence to spur race war and create social chaos
  45. World’s most powerful ex-New Yorker gets a DC military parade, not a ticker-tape celebration in Manhattan’s Canyon of Heroes
  46. Teens say they can access firearms at home, even when parents lock them up, new research shows
  47. LGBTQ+ patients stay up-to-date on preventive care when their doctors are supportive, saving money and lives throughout society
  48. Where is the center of the universe?
  49. Do you know how to prepare for your digital life after death? CU Boulder’s student-run clinic has some advice
  50. How the ‘Big Beautiful Bill’ positions US energy to be more costly for consumers and the climate