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Plummeting tax revenues will put governors in tough budget situations

  • Written by Raymond Scheppach, Professor of Public Policy, University of Virginia
Good old days: Before the coronavirus hit, governors, like California's Gavin Newsom, had easier jobs.AP/Rich Pedroncelli, Pool

“Governors Have the Best Political Jobs in America” is the name of one of my lectures in a leadership course I occasionally teach at the University of Virginia.

In that class, I describe how governors have huge...

Read more: Plummeting tax revenues will put governors in tough budget situations

Terrorists, militants and criminal gangs join the fight against the coronavirus

  • Written by Jori Breslawski, Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science, University of Maryland
Members of an arm of Hezbollah spray disinfectant in a Beirut neighborhood to fight the spread of the coronavirus.AP Photo/Bilal Hussein

The favelas of Rio de Janeiro are a toxic mix of tight quarters, few if any health services and little clean water for residents to wash their hands.

In these conditions ripe for the spread of the coronavirus, the...

Read more: Terrorists, militants and criminal gangs join the fight against the coronavirus

Videoconferencing keeps people connected while the coronavirus keeps them inside – but privacy and security are far from perfect

  • Written by Elizabeth Stoycheff, Associate Professor of Communication, Wayne State University
Face to face, virtually.SammyVision/Moment via Getty Images

If, before COVID-19, you were concerned about all the data that technology companies had about you, just wait. As stay-at-home orders push more professional and social activities online, it’s becoming harder to remain in control.

Look no further than Zoom, which suffered dual security...

Read more: Videoconferencing keeps people connected while the coronavirus keeps them inside – but privacy and...

Study shows pangolins may have passed new coronavirus from bats to humans

  • Written by Yang Zhang, Professor of Computational Medicine & Bioinformatics, University of Michigan
This Sunda pangolin found throughout Southeast Asia is currently considered to be critically endangered.Piekfrosch / German Wikipedia, CC BY-SA

Pangolins, not snakes, may be the missing link for transmission of the new coronavirus from bats to humans.

Since its initial outbreak at Huanan Seafood Wholesale Market in Wuhan, China, in late 2019,...

Read more: Study shows pangolins may have passed new coronavirus from bats to humans

Why coronavirus death rates can't be summed up in one simple number

  • Written by Jonathan Fuller, Assistant Professor, Department of History and Philosophy of Science, University of Pittsburgh
When leaders make public health decisions, such as how long social distancing should be maintained to reduce the coronavirus death toll, they often use mathematical models. The numbers aren't always as simple as they seem.Alex Brandon/AP

When people fall seriously ill from the new coronavirus, death rates become a highly personal matter. Yet we...

Read more: Why coronavirus death rates can't be summed up in one simple number

Older Americans are risking coronavirus exposure to get their medications

  • Written by Sarah Vordenberg, Clinical Associate Professor of Pharmacy, University of Michigan
A new survey finds that, when it comes to medication, many older adults plan to keep going to the pharmacy as they always have.Braulio Jatar/Echoes Wire/Barcroft Media via Getty Images

It’s been nearly a month since the U.S. government began urging older Americans to stay home to avoid exposure to the new coronavirus. That means many older...

Read more: Older Americans are risking coronavirus exposure to get their medications

Colombia hopes for 'humanitarian' ceasefire during coronavirus as violence resurges

  • Written by Shauna N Gillooly, PhD Candidate, Political Science, University of California, Irvine
Colombian soldiers patrol the streets of Bogota on March 30, 2020, during a mandatory national quarantine. GUILLERMO MUNOZ/AFP via Getty Images

Colombia’s 2016 peace accord was meant to end a half century of conflict with the Marxist Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC.

Yet some areas previously dominated by the FARC guerrillas...

Read more: Colombia hopes for 'humanitarian' ceasefire during coronavirus as violence resurges

Coronavirus will test US's civic health too

  • Written by David Jacobson, Professor of Sociology, University of South Florida
A worker washes the sidewalk near San Francisco's City Hall.Justin Sullivan/Getty Images

The immediate concerns of the coronavirus are clear: an unprecedented health crisis and economic devastation. But it isn’t just hospitals and businesses feeling the strain. Civic and governing institutions will soon be severely tested – and that...

Read more: Coronavirus will test US's civic health too

The unintended consequences of marijuana decriminalization

  • Written by Nikolay Anguelov, Associate Professor of Public Policy, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth
Marijuana decriminalization won't end arrests.Gleti/Getty Images

America’s decades-long war on drugs disproportionately harmed minorities. Now, it seems that decriminalization of marijuana hasn’t leveled the playing field.

Black men are 12 times more likely than white men to spend time incarcerated in the United States. College...

Read more: The unintended consequences of marijuana decriminalization

A decade after the Deepwater Horizon explosion, offshore drilling is still unsafe

  • Written by Donald Boesch, Professor of Marine Science, University of Maryland Center for Environmental Science
A satellite image of the oil slick as it looked in late May 2010, a month after the Deepwater Horizon well exploded. The oil plume looks grayish white. NASA/Goddard/Jen Shoemaker and Stu Snodgrass

Ten years ago, on April 20, 2010, the BP Deepwater Horizon oil rig exploded, killing 11 crew members and starting the largest ocean oil spill in history....

Read more: A decade after the Deepwater Horizon explosion, offshore drilling is still unsafe

More Articles ...

  1. Inside the Beatles' messy breakup, 50 years ago
  2. Going back to school to deal with hard times? For-profit schools could make things even harder
  3. Why your local store keeps running out of flour, toilet paper and prescription drugs
  4. Video: The coronavirus pandemic lays bare a host of cyber issues
  5. Clear, consistent health messaging critical to stemming epidemics and limiting coronavirus deaths
  6. COVID-19 is hitting black and poor communities the hardest, underscoring fault lines in access and care for those on margins
  7. How can the houseless fight the coronavirus? A community organization partners with academics to create a grassroots hand-washing infrastructure
  8. For asthma patients, the novel coronavirus can be scary. Here's what you need to know
  9. Coronavirus research done too fast is testing publishing safeguards, bad science is getting through
  10. Here's how Americans coped during the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic
  11. Coronavirus: Developing economies are getting crushed – here's why their rich neighbors should help them
  12. Digital surveillance can help bring the coronavirus pandemic under control – but also threatens privacy
  13. Visualizing the virus
  14. Why sports still matter – even in a time when you can't actually watch any
  15. Overloaded morgues, mass graves and infectious remains: How forensic pathologists handle the coronavirus dead
  16. Bernie drops out, as Democrats pick pragmatism over consistency
  17. Don't rely on a quarantini to boost your immune system during coronavirus
  18. Math misconceptions may lead people to underestimate the true threat of COVID-19
  19. Social distancing increased over the course of human history – but so did empathy and new ways to connect
  20. In the rush to innovate for COVID-19 drugs, sound science is still essential
  21. The long history of US racism against Asian Americans, from 'yellow peril' to 'model minority' to the 'Chinese virus'
  22. Porn use is up, thanks to the pandemic
  23. A coronavirus vaccine that wouldn't require a shot
  24. America is drinking its way through the coronavirus crisis – that means more health woes ahead
  25. Domestic violence growing in wake of coronavirus outbreak
  26. A virtual Passover may be the first for many, but Judaism has a long history of ritual innovation
  27. With Boris Johnson in intensive care, who runs the UK?
  28. ¿Qué tipo de vacunas están desarrollando los laboratorios contra el coronavirus?
  29. Beyond sanitizing and social distancing – a healthy circadian rhythm may keep you sane and increase resilience to fight COVID-19
  30. What does 'recovered from coronavirus' mean? 4 questions answered about how some survive and what happens next
  31. Hoarding during the coronavirus isn't just unnecessary, it's ethically wrong
  32. Striking Amazon, Instacart employees reveal how a basic economic principle could derail our ability to combat the coronavirus
  33. 6 ways to build motivation to do your schoolwork now that you're forced to learn online at home
  34. A world without sports
  35. Crops could face double trouble from insects and a warming climate
  36. Coronavirus versus democracy: 5 countries where emergency powers risk abuse
  37. Democratic governors are quicker in responding to the coronavirus than Republicans
  38. Why Latino citizens are worrying more about deportation
  39. The CDC now recommends wearing a mask in some cases – a physician explains why and when to wear one
  40. Doctors are making life-and-death choices over coronavirus patients – it could have long-term consequences for them
  41. Social media fuels wave of coronavirus misinformation as users focus on popularity, not accuracy
  42. Stuck at home with your partner? Look to retirees for how to make it work
  43. Here's how scientists are tracking the genetic evolution of COVID-19
  44. Shipwrecked! How social isolation can enrich our spiritual lives – like Robinson Crusoe
  45. Census 2020 will protect your privacy more than ever – but at the price of accuracy
  46. Why wear face masks in public? Here's what the research shows
  47. 'Tiger King' and America's captive tiger problem
  48. Government secrecy is growing during the coronavirus pandemic
  49. Coronavirus case counts are going to go up – but that doesn't mean social distancing is a bust
  50. Blue dye from red beets – chemists devise a safer new pigment option