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Bikini islanders still deal with fallout of US nuclear tests, 70 years later

  • Written by Timothy J. Jorgensen, Director of the Health Physics and Radiation Protection Graduate Program and Associate Professor of Radiation Medicine, Georgetown University
imagea f a oDepartment of Energy

In 1946, French fashion designer Jacques Heim released a woman’s swimsuit he called the “Atome” (French for “atom”) – a name selected to suggest its design would be as shocking to people that summer as the atomic bombings of Japan had been the summer before.

imageThe scandalous...

Read more: Bikini islanders still deal with fallout of US nuclear tests, 70 years later

Whatever the soul is, its existence can't be proved or disproved by natural science

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
imageRobert Blair, "The Soul hovering over the Body reluctantly parting with Life"William Blake, via Wikimedia Commons

In 1901, one of the most famous metaphysical experiments of the 20th century was performed by a Massachusetts physician. His name was Duncan MacDougall, and he believed that, if the soul were real, it should have measurable weight. He...

Read more: Whatever the soul is, its existence can't be proved or disproved by natural science

Early days of internet offer lessons for boosting 3D printing

  • Written by Adam Thierer, Senior Research Fellow, Technology Policy Program, Mercatus Center, George Mason University
imageInnovating with 3D printing offers huge promise, such as these 3D-printed microscopes.SynBioSRI/Flickr

Even in its relative infancy, 3D printing has created an enormous list of possibilities: dental aligners to straighten your teeth, unique toys for your children, inexpensive custom prosthetics for people with limb deficiencies, and restoring lost...

Read more: Early days of internet offer lessons for boosting 3D printing

Can outsiders help Venezuela in the midst of crisis, again?

  • Written by Jennifer Lynn McCoy, Distinguished University Professor of Political Science, Georgia State University

Outsiders are once again attempting to alleviate political conflict in Venezuela.

A decade and a half after a failed coup against Venezuela’s iconic leader Hugo Chávez, his successor, Nicolás Maduro, is similarly embattled. He faces an emboldened opposition and widespread frustration, as the state of the nation deteriorates.

The...

Read more: Can outsiders help Venezuela in the midst of crisis, again?

Is it time to eliminate tenure for professors?

  • Written by Samantha Bernstein, PhD Student, University of Southern California
imageIs tenure outdated?Merrimack College, CC BY-NC-ND

The State College of Florida recently scrapped tenure for incoming faculty. New professors at this public university will be hired on the basis of annual contracts that the school can decline to renew at any time.

The decision has been highly controversial. But this is not the first time tenure has...

Read more: Is it time to eliminate tenure for professors?

Why Iran's anti-American hardliners want to buy US-made Boeings for Iran Air

  • Written by Nader Habibi, Professor of the Economics of the Middle East at the Crown Center for Middle East Studies, Brandeis University

Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei – the Islamic Republic’s ultimate authority – reluctantly blessed the nuclear agreement between Iran and the West that was signed in June 2015 and went into effect in January. Since then, he has gone out of his way to emphasize that his endorsement didn’t mean he wanted to normalize...

Read more: Why Iran's anti-American hardliners want to buy US-made Boeings for Iran Air

Criminal injustice: Wounds from incarceration that never heal

  • Written by Tony N. Brown, Associate Professor of Sociology, Vanderbilt University

Mass incarceration damages individuals and communities in ways that scholars are just starting to explore.

New research that we’ve published with our colleague Mary Laske Bell shows that African American men who are former inmates are irrevocably harmed by time they spent behind bars.

This finding is troubling because incarceration has...

Read more: Criminal injustice: Wounds from incarceration that never heal

Thorny technical questions remain for net neutrality

  • Written by Harsha V. Madhyastha, Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, University of Michigan
imageNot all online traffic is the same; should we treat it the same anyway?Scale via shutterstock.com

Federal rules mandating network neutrality – the concept that all internet traffic should be treated equally – were upheld recently by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. The decision was hailed as a win by civil-rights groups, entrepreneurs...

Read more: Thorny technical questions remain for net neutrality

Intolerance on the march: do Brexit and Trump point to global rejection of liberal ideals?

  • Written by Charles Hankla, Associate Professor of Political Science, Georgia State University
imageWalls intended to separate, such as this one in Berlin, seem to be back in vogue.Berlin wall via www.shutterstock.com

Back in 1991, the eminent political scientist Samuel Huntington pointed out that democratic transitions around the world often come in waves.

He pointed to a “third wave” of democratization that began in the 1970s with...

Read more: Intolerance on the march: do Brexit and Trump point to global rejection of liberal ideals?

Sex and other myths about weight loss

  • Written by Tammy Chang, Assistant Professor, Family Medicine, University of Michigan
imageContrary to myth, sex is not good exercise. From www.shutterstock.com

The estimated annual health care costs related to obesity are over $210 billion, or nearly 21 percent of annual medical spending in the United States. Americans spend $60 billion on weight loss products each year, trying everything from expensive meal replacement products to...

Read more: Sex and other myths about weight loss

More Articles ...

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  3. What's lost when we photograph life instead of experiencing it?
  4. Un-Trapped: Supreme Court strikes down Texas law limiting abortion
  5. How do food manufacturers pick those dates on their product packaging – and what do they mean?
  6. How do children learn to detect snakes, spiders and other dangerous things?
  7. Explainer: how Panama Canal expansion will transform shipping once again
  8. License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety
  9. Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data
  10. The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom
  11. Supreme Court immigration confusion? Blame the U.S. Senate
  12. Why the GM food labeling debate is not over
  13. Is it ethical to purchase human organs?
  14. Deadlocked: what a nine-word decision means for five million undocumented immigrants
  15. What explains Britain's Brexit shocker?
  16. What consumers want in GM food labeling is simpler than you think
  17. Eliminating inequalities needs affirmative action
  18. Why bad news for one Muslim American is bad news for all Muslims
  19. Britain exits the EU: how Brexit will hit America
  20. Does eating bamboo make it harder for pandas to reproduce?
  21. Will the new toxic chemical safety law protect us?
  22. After Supreme Court’s Fisher decision: what we need to know about considering race in admissions
  23. How the 2016 presidential election will shape American identity
  24. Trump's energy plan poses climate threat to U.S. economy
  25. How community schools can beat summer learning loss for low-income students
  26. Trump's dog whistle: the white, screwed-over sports icon
  27. Hate crimes against LGBTQ people are a public health issue
  28. Is Panama on the verge of a scientific brain drain?
  29. Why progressives should rescue the TPP trade deal
  30. How risky are the World Economic Forum’s top 10 emerging technologies for 2016?
  31. Can we harness bacteria to help clean up future oil spills?
  32. What summertime means for black children
  33. Is there a link between being in the closet and being homophobic?
  34. Why stress is more likely to cause depression in men than in women
  35. Will Donald Trump's call to profile Muslims offend voters?
  36. Buying and selling hacked passwords: How does it work?
  37. Love it or leave it: why the UK's Brexit vote should matter to Americans
  38. Would Brexit be followed by breakup of the United Kingdom?
  39. Sandy Hook lawsuit is latest effort to hold gun makers liable for mass shootings
  40. 2016: the proving ground for political data
  41. To fight antibiotic resistance, we need to fight bad prescribing habits
  42. Expand the draft to women – or repeal it? A long constitutional debate continues
  43. Of bears and biases: scientific judgment and the fate of Yellowstone's grizzlies
  44. Love it or leave it: why the U.K.'s Brexit vote should matter to Americans
  45. Why the first Olympic refugee team may not be the last
  46. Big data jobs are out there – are you ready?
  47. An epidemic of children dying in hot cars: a tragedy that can be prevented
  48. Should ethics professors observe higher standards of behavior?
  49. Cracking the mystery of the 'Worldwide Hum'
  50. Brexit backers claim U.K. is drowning in EU regulations – are Americans underwater too?