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Iceland didn't hunt any whales in 2019 – and public appetite for whale meat is fading

  • Written by Joe Roman, Research Affiliate, Gund Institute for Environment, University of Vermont
Whale watching (here, off Húsavík, Iceland) may be better for the local economy than whale hunting. Davide Cantelli/Wikimedia , CC BY

One of the most important global conservation events of the past year was something that didn’t happen. For the first time since 2002, Iceland – one of just three countries that still allow...

Read more: Iceland didn't hunt any whales in 2019 – and public appetite for whale meat is fading

Veterans, refugees and victims of war crimes are all vulnerable to PTSD

  • Written by Arash Javanbakht, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, Wayne State University
Rep. Ilhan Omar (D-Minn.), with Rep. Marc Pocan (D.-Wis.) behind her, speaks Jan. 8, 2020 at the Capitol.Jose Luis Magana/AP Photo

Mental health is often used in political discourse and arguments. Post-traumatic stress disorder was the subject Jan. 8, when Rep. Ilhan Omar (D.-Minn.), herself a Somalian refugee who had spent years in a refugee camp...

Read more: Veterans, refugees and victims of war crimes are all vulnerable to PTSD

Even planets have their (size) limits

  • Written by Natalie Hinkel, Planetary Astrophysicist, Senior Research Scientist at the Southwest Research Institute and Co-Investigator for the Nexus for Exoplanet System Science (NExSS), Arizona State University
A planet-forming disk made from rock and gas surrounds a young star. NASA/JPL-Caltech/SwRI/MSSS/ Gerald Eichstädt /Seán Doran

Scientists have discovered over 4,000 exoplanets outside of our Solar System, according to NASA’s Exoplanet Archive.

Some of these planets orbit multiple stars at the same time. Certain planets are so close...

Read more: Even planets have their (size) limits

What to think when you're thinking about impeachment: 5 essential reads

  • Written by Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation US
Where the action is: The capitol building in Washington, D.C. Aurora Samperio/NurPhoto via Getty Images

If you have a big appetite for politics news, you’re not going to go hungry this week.

The substantive part of the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump now begins, after Democrats from the House of Representatives delivered the...

Read more: What to think when you're thinking about impeachment: 5 essential reads

Native people did not use fire to shape New England's landscape

  • Written by Wyatt Oswald, Professor of Environmental Science, Emerson College
Old-growth forests prevailed in New England for thousands of years.David Foster, CC BY-ND

An interpretive sign stands at the edge of the Montague Plains Wildlife Management Area, a 1,500-acre state conservation property in central Massachusetts. It explains the site’s open land vegetation has been shaped by “millennia of fire”...

Read more: Native people did not use fire to shape New England's landscape

Impeachment trial senators swear an oath aimed at guarding 'against malice, falsehood, and evasion'

  • Written by Susan P. Fino, Professor of Political Science, Wayne State University
Sen. Cory Booker, D-N.J., signs the oath book after being sworn in for the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, Thursday, Jan. 16, 2020. Senate Television via AP

The 100 United States senators who are jurors in the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump have taken a special oath in order to take part in that proceeding. As they enter...

Read more: Impeachment trial senators swear an oath aimed at guarding 'against malice, falsehood, and evasion'

Bill de Blasio's bagel gaffe and the fraught politics of food

  • Written by Stacy A. Cordery, Professor of History, Iowa State University
Oh no he didn't.secret agent mike/Getty Images

If New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio hadn’t already dropped out of the 2020 presidential race, #bagelgate might have been the nail in the coffin.

His Jan. 15 tweet praising a toasted bagel on National Bagel Day instantly set off hardline bagel devotees-cum-voters. De Blasio quickly amended his...

Read more: Bill de Blasio's bagel gaffe and the fraught politics of food

'Lennon Walls' herald a sticky-note revolution in Hong Kong

  • Written by Jeff Hou, Professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Washington
Hong Kong's first Lennon Wall appeared in 2014.Wpcpey/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Months of anti-government protests in Hong Kong have physically reshaped the city. As a scholar of urban landscapes, I have been interested in how the citizens and activists made use of the urban environment during the movement, including walls of Post-it sticky notes...

Read more: 'Lennon Walls' herald a sticky-note revolution in Hong Kong

How a heritage of black preaching shaped MLK's voice in calling for justice

  • Written by Kenyatta R. Gilbert, Professor of Homiletics, Howard University
Martin Luther King, Jr. delivers his famous 'I Have a Dream' speech in front of the Lincoln Memorial during the Freedom March on Washington in 1963.Bettmann/Contributor via Getty images

The name Martin Luther King Jr. is iconic in the United States. President Barack Obama mentioned King in both his Democratic National Convention nomination...

Read more: How a heritage of black preaching shaped MLK's voice in calling for justice

Why bosses should let employees surf the web at work

  • Written by Stephanie Andel, Assistant Professor of Psychology, IUPUI
Cyberloafing may not be a waste of time after all. GaudiLab/Shutterstock.com

If you’re like most workers, you don’t spend 100% of your time at the office doing what you’re supposed to be doing.

In fact, on average, U.S. workers spend about 10% of their work day surfing the internet, emailing friends or shopping online. This...

Read more: Why bosses should let employees surf the web at work

More Articles ...

  1. Identifying aquatic plants with drones could be the key to reducing a parasitic infection in people
  2. What is a bar mitzvah?
  3. I asked people why they don't vote, and this is what they told me
  4. A Navy scandal sheds light on the nature of bribery and the limits of free speech
  5. Black kids and suicide: Why are rates so high, and so ignored?
  6. The first step in managing plastic waste is measuring it – here's how we did it for one Caribbean country
  7. Why teen depression rates are rising faster for girls than boys
  8. US and Iran have a long, troubled history
  9. Why you need more Vitamin D in the winter
  10. Why do onions make you cry?
  11. What do we want? Unbiased reporting! When do we want it? During protests!
  12. US-China trade pact President Trump just signed fails to resolve 3 fundamental issues
  13. Russia's cabinet resigns and it's all part of Putin's plan
  14. Screen time: Conclusions about the effects of digital media are often incomplete, irrelevant or wrong
  15. What Iranians think of the US and their own government
  16. Supreme Court DACA decision isn't just about Dreamers -- it's about whether the White House has to tell the truth
  17. Who is born a US citizen?
  18. An old debate over religion in school is opening up again
  19. Meet the narwhal, 'unicorn of the sea'
  20. Why fitness trackers may not give you all the 'credit' you hoped for
  21. 3 quotes that defined the first Democratic debate of 2020
  22. Earthquake forecast for Puerto Rico: Dozens more large aftershocks are likely
  23. Worrying about being drafted doesn't mean you're disloyal – it's an old American tradition
  24. Parental leave laws are failing single parents
  25. How Prohibition changed the way Americans drink, 100 years ago
  26. 'Uncut Gems' celebrates Manhattan’s Diamond District, a neighborhood that's a window into the past
  27. Think twice before shouting your virtues online – moral grandstanding is toxic
  28. Being copycats might be key to being human
  29. Microwaving sewage waste may make it safe to use as fertilizer on crops
  30. Heading into Iowa: Where do the Democratic candidates stand on health care coverage?
  31. Why the US-Iran conflict isn’t driving oil prices higher – and why it probably should
  32. Can the Constitution stop the government from lying to the public?
  33. The secret origins of presidential polling
  34. What US election officials could learn from Australia about boosting voter turnout
  35. High-priced specialty drugs: Exposing the flaws in the system
  36. Pope ends a secrecy rule for Catholic sexual abuse cases, but for victims many barriers to justice remain
  37. Restricting trade in endangered species can backfire, triggering market booms
  38. Why hip-hop belongs in today's classrooms
  39. Brexit could spell the end of globalization, and the global prosperity that came with it
  40. Cyberspace is the next front in Iran-US conflict – and private companies may bear the brunt
  41. Why are there seven days in a week?
  42. Weinstein jurors must differentiate between consent and compliance – which research shows isn't easy
  43. Large turnouts for Soleimani’s funeral in Iran carry powerful collective emotions – just as Americans saw during the colonial era
  44. Killing of Soleimani evokes dark history of political assassinations in the formative days of Shiite Islam
  45. Why some public universities get to keep their donors secret
  46. The made-up crisis behind the state takeover of Houston's public schools
  47. We're living in the bizarre world that Flaubert envisioned
  48. Your blood type may influence your vulnerability to norovirus, the winter vomiting virus
  49. Why we are hard-wired to worry, and what we can do to calm down
  50. 3D printing of body parts is coming fast – but regulations are not ready