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All wildfires are not alike, but the US is fighting them that way

  • Written by Stephen Pyne, Regents Professor in the School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University
Wildland firefighters, like this crew heading into New Mexico's Gila National Forest, in 2012, are equipped and operate differently from urban firefighters.USFS Gila National Forest, CC BY-SA

So far, the 2018 fire season has produced a handful of big fires in California, Nevada, New Mexico and Colorado; conflagrations in Oklahoma and Kansas; and a...

Read more: All wildfires are not alike, but the US is fighting them that way

Why vaccine opponents think they know more than medical experts

  • Written by Matthew Motta, Postdoctoral fellow, University of Pennsylvania
Vaccinations have saved countless lives and untold suffering, even though many adults still believe vaccines are bad for their children.Africa Studios/Shutterstock.com

One of the most contentious areas of health policy over the past two decades has been the safety of vaccination. Vaccines prevent the outbreak of diseases that used to be widespread,...

Read more: Why vaccine opponents think they know more than medical experts

Here's how to encourage more girls to pursue science and math careers

  • Written by Jilana Boston, Ph.D. Student in Cognitive Development, New York University
Negative stereotypes about girls' ability can discourage from them pursuing careers in math and science, researchers say.Rawpixel.com/www.shutterstock.com

Women remain underrepresented in science, technology, engineering and mathematics, or STEM. In the field of engineering, for example, women earned fewer than 20 percent of doctorates in 2014.

Such...

Read more: Here's how to encourage more girls to pursue science and math careers

Why the case of Jahi McMath is important for understanding the role of race for black patients

  • Written by Yolonda Wilson, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Howard University
A photo of Jahi McMath shown at her funeral service at Acts Full Gospel Church in Oakland, Calif.AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

California teenager Jahi McMath, who suffered catastrophic brain injury as a result of a routine tonsil surgery, died on June 22, 2018.

Her death came after four years of her family fighting in court to continue her care in...

Read more: Why the case of Jahi McMath is important for understanding the role of race for black patients

Does thinking you look fat affect how much money you earn?

  • Written by Patricia Smith, Professor of Economics, University of Michigan
Is the scale telling the truth?VGstockstudio/Shutterstock.com

Two things people often think about are money and their appearance. Past research has shown that there is a correlation between the two: People subjectively considered attractive earn more.

And body weight plays a major role in attractiveness. A person’s body mass index –...

Read more: Does thinking you look fat affect how much money you earn?

The US is facing a serious shortage of airline pilots

  • Written by Peter Gall, Teaching Assistant Professor of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, West Virginia University
For many, the job of a pilot has lost its luster.Emilian Danaila/shutterstock.com

The national security of the U.S. relies on a healthy airline industry. That requires modern reliable airplanes – and highly skilled pilots to operate them.

However, the U.S. has a shortage of pilots right now, particularly at the regional airline levels.

Accordi...

Read more: The US is facing a serious shortage of airline pilots

Derecho de asilo: El abuso doméstico y la violencia anti-gay sí se califican como 'persecución'

  • Written by Sabi Ardalan, Assistant Clinical Professor, Harvard Law School, Harvard University
file bwgAP Photo/Tsering Topgyal

El Fiscal General de Estados Unidos, Jeff Sessions, recientemente anuló décadas de precedente legal en Estados Unidos al afirmar que las mujeres que huyen de violencia doméstica no reúnen por lo general los requisitos para el asilo. Para hacerlo, desafió el principio de que las...

Read more: Derecho de asilo: El abuso doméstico y la violencia anti-gay sí se califican como 'persecución'

Nicaragua intenta derrocar a un dictador (de nuevo)

  • Written by Benjamin Waddell, Assistant Professor of International Studies, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
Nicaragua, which overthrew its last violent dictator in 1979, is the only Latin American country since Cuba to stage a successful revolution.AP Photo/Alfredo Zuniga

Read in English.

Después de meses de protestas casi constantes en Nicaragua, al menos 300 personas han muerto, incluidos en esta cifra cuatro policías, mil personas...

Read more: Nicaragua intenta derrocar a un dictador (de nuevo)

The travel ban in numbers: Why families and refugees lose big

  • Written by Raquel Aldana, Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Diversity and Professor of Law, University of California, Davis

On June 16, the U.S. Supreme Court lifted the 9th Circuit’s nationwide injunction against the third version of President Donald Trump’s travel ban. This ruling marks Trump’s first court victory since he issued the original travel ban back in January 2017.

Thousands now face indefinite separation from family members from the...

Read more: The travel ban in numbers: Why families and refugees lose big

Triclosan, often maligned, may have a good side — treating cystic fibrosis infections

  • Written by Chris Waters, Associate Professor of Microbiology, Michigan State University
Antibiotic-resistant bacteria inside a biofilm.Kateryna Kon/Shutterstock.com

Maybe you’ve had the experience of wading in a stream and struggling to keep your balance on the slick rocks, or forgetting to brush your teeth in the morning and feeling a slimy coating in your mouth. These are examples of bacterial biofilms that are found anywhere...

Read more: Triclosan, often maligned, may have a good side — treating cystic fibrosis infections

More Articles ...

  1. Breastfeeding has been the best public health policy throughout history
  2. The pace of nonprofit media growth is picking up
  3. Trump isn't the first leader to rattle the world order
  4. How cities help immigrants feel at home: 4 charts
  5. Harnessing natural gas to harvest water from the air might solve 2 big problems at once
  6. Meet the foodies who are changing the way Americans eat
  7. Could human cancer treatments be the key to saving sea turtles from a disfiguring tumor disease?
  8. Silicon Valley, from 'heart’s delight' to toxic wasteland
  9. A long fuse: 'The Population Bomb' is still ticking 50 years after its publication
  10. AT T-Time Warner, net neutrality and how to make sense of the media merger frenzy
  11. Russia is top on NATO's agenda and Trump is the wild card
  12. Which 3-letter agency is enforcing US immigration laws at the border?
  13. Green-baiting lawmakers are accusing environmentalists of doubling as ‘foreign agents’
  14. Mourning death by suicide: How you can provide support for the bereaved
  15. Rock 'n' roll is noise pollution – with ecological implications that can spread through a food web
  16. To improve digital well-being, put your phone down and talk to people
  17. Supreme Court polarization is not inevitable — just look at Europe
  18. Inside the sacred danger of Thailand's caves
  19. A rare instance when preventative screening is worth the dollar cost
  20. Por qué el censo de 2020 no debería preguntar sobre tu ciudadanía
  21. Why is the Strait of Hormuz important?
  22. Silicon Valley's cautionary tale shows what can go wrong when charities get obsessed with growth
  23. 7.5 billion and counting: How many humans can the Earth support?
  24. How the Catholic Church came to oppose birth control
  25. Considering race in college admissions – 3 questions answered
  26. Alcohol's health benefits hard to prove, but harms are easy to document
  27. Is the Supreme Court's legitimacy undermined in a polarized age?
  28. What next for the EPA? Here's what Reagan did
  29. We estimate China only makes $8.46 from an iPhone – and that's why Trump's trade war is futile
  30. Poland's judicial purge another step toward authoritarian democracy
  31. Support for refugees increases when refugees participate in integration programs
  32. Sex and gender diversity is growing across the US
  33. The monster festival: A pilgrimage to small town America
  34. A novel 'smart' antibiotic may target most common bacterial infection contracted in US hospitals
  35. Pre-existing conditions: The age group most vulnerable if coverage goes away
  36. What the Nazis driving people from homes taught philosopher Hannah Arendt about the rights of refugees
  37. Coping with heat waves: 5 essential reads
  38. Trade rules are deeply flawed but Trump’s tariff fixation is hurting America and the rest of the world
  39. Milking cows for data – not just dairy products
  40. Shelter design can help people recover from homelessness
  41. Busting 3 common myths about homelessness
  42. How do Americans really feel about interracial couples?
  43. Why it doesn't matter if a Harley is 'made in America'
  44. What is it about yawning?
  45. Is gang activity on the rise? A movement to abolish gang databases makes it hard to tell
  46. Anti-slavery heroes Charles Langston and Simeon Bushnell deserve pardons too, President Trump
  47. How Roe v. Wade changed the lives of American women
  48. When caring hurts: Attrition among social workers, medicine's unsung heroes
  49. Local, county and state governments are suing oil companies over climate change
  50. How ride-hailing could improve public transportation instead of undercutting it