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Por qué el censo de 2020 no debería preguntar sobre tu ciudadanía

  • Written by Jennifer Van Hook, Roy C. Buck Professor of Sociology and Demography, Pennsylvania State University
Ceremonia de naturalización en diciembre de 2015. AP Photo/Evan Vucci, File

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“¿Esta persona es ciudadano de los Estados Unidos?”

El 26 de marzo, el Departamento de Comercio de los Estados Unidos anunció que se agregaría una pregunta sobre ciudadanía al censo de 2020. Esta pregunta, que...

Read more: Por qué el censo de 2020 no debería preguntar sobre tu ciudadanía

Why is the Strait of Hormuz important?

  • Written by Rockford Weitz, Professor of Practice and Director of the Fletcher Maritime Studies Program, Tufts University
Strait of HormuzWikipedia

Global shipping is constrained by geography.

Massive oil tankers and cargo ships – carrying over 90 percent of global trade flows by weight – converge in narrow straits. The result: The world’s key shipping lanes are often crowded.

As a researcher who has focused on strategic maritime chokepoints for over...

Read more: Why is the Strait of Hormuz important?

Silicon Valley's cautionary tale shows what can go wrong when charities get obsessed with growth

  • Written by Brian Mittendorf, Fisher Designated Professor of Accounting and Chair, Department of Accounting & Management Information Systems (MIS), The Ohio State University
Charities should not make amassing more and more money their top priority.Shutterstock.com/Stokkete

An obsession with growth. A failure to intervene when an executive allegedly bullies and sexually harasses staff. High employee turnover and burnout.

This is not the plot of one of those movies dramatizing Wall Street greed. It’s actually a...

Read more: Silicon Valley's cautionary tale shows what can go wrong when charities get obsessed with growth

7.5 billion and counting: How many humans can the Earth support?

  • Written by Andrew D. Hwang, Associate Professor of Mathematics, College of the Holy Cross
Slums in Caracas, Venezuela.Wikimedia

Humans are the most populous large mammal on Earth today, and probably in all of geological history. This World Population Day, humans number in the vicinity of 7.5 to 7.6 billion individuals.

Can the Earth support this many people indefinitely? What will happen if we do nothing to manage future population...

Read more: 7.5 billion and counting: How many humans can the Earth support?

How the Catholic Church came to oppose birth control

  • Written by Lisa McClain, Professor of History and Gender Studies, Boise State University
Pope Paul VI banned contraception for Catholics in the 1968 encyclical, "Humanae Vitae."AP Photo/Jim Pringle

This month marks the 50th anniversary of the landmark “Humanae Vitae,” Pope Paul VI’s strict prohibition against artificial contraception, issued in the aftermath of the development of the birth control pill. At the time,...

Read more: How the Catholic Church came to oppose birth control

Considering race in college admissions – 3 questions answered

  • Written by Stella M Flores, Associate Professor of Higher Education; Associate Dean for Faculty Development and Diversity; Director of Access and Equity, Steinhardt Institute for Higher Education Policy, New York University
Federal guidance on race is college admissions is changing.www.shutterstock.com

On July 3, the Trump administration announced it will reverse several policy memos outlining how colleges and universities can use race as a factor in admissions.

The memos aren’t law, but rather Obama-era guidance – issued jointly by the departments of...

Read more: Considering race in college admissions – 3 questions answered

Alcohol's health benefits hard to prove, but harms are easy to document

  • Written by Christina Mair, Assistant professor, Behavioral and Community Health Sciences, University of Pittsburgh
Alcohol is part of American life, but its health risks may be underplayed.graphic.mooi/shutterstock.com

Alcohol is the most widely used drug in the world, including in the United States.

About 70 percent of adults in the United States report past-year alcohol consumption, with over 37 million drinkers reporting binge drinking (defined for women as...

Read more: Alcohol's health benefits hard to prove, but harms are easy to document

Is the Supreme Court's legitimacy undermined in a polarized age?

  • Written by Kevin J. McMahon, Professor of Political Science & Director of the Graduate Program in Public Policy, Trinity College
The U.S. Supreme CourtShutterstock

When I learned Justice Anthony Kennedy would retire, my thoughts went immediately to the confirmation of the newest justice, Neil Gorsuch.

The Senate’s confirmation of Gorsuch was unprecedented in the history of the country. Never before had a “minority president” named a “minority...

Read more: Is the Supreme Court's legitimacy undermined in a polarized age?

What next for the EPA? Here's what Reagan did

  • Written by Seema Kakade, Assistant Professor of Law and Director, Environmental Law Clinic, University of Maryland
Rep. Dan Kildee, D-Mich., speaks about EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt and the state of the EPA during a protest on April 25, 2018, in Washington. AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Scott Pruitt’s resignation as EPA administrator caught many by surprise because President Donald Trump had repeatedly supported Pruitt’s efforts to dismantle...

Read more: What next for the EPA? Here's what Reagan did

We estimate China only makes $8.46 from an iPhone – and that's why Trump's trade war is futile

  • Written by Jason Dedrick, Professor, Syracuse University

The Trump administration’s tariffs on China have so far targeted mostly industrial goods like aircraft engines and gas compressors. But the administration has also threatened to slap tariffs on US$200 billion in other goods if the dispute continues.

No list of goods has been released, but the list would have to include consumer electronics,...

Read more: We estimate China only makes $8.46 from an iPhone – and that's why Trump's trade war is futile

More Articles ...

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  33. What is the WTO?
  34. Justice Kennedy's LGBTQ legacy may be short-lived
  35. Feasting rituals – and the cooperation they require – are a crucial step toward human civilization
  36. Will Trump's Supreme Court justices show independence from him?
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  42. Painter Jon McNaughton's novel portrayal of modern conservatism
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  45. Rural Americans' struggles against factory farm pollution find traction in court
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  47. Observing the universe with a camera traveling near the speed of light
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