NewsPronto

 
Times Advertising


.

The Conversation

Medical examiners and coroners have borne a heavy burden during the COVID-19 pandemic and have often felt invisible and unsupported

  • Written by Staci Zavattaro, Professor of Public Administration, University of Central Florida
imageWhile doctors and nurses have received well-deserved praise for their service on the frontlines, medical examiners and coroners perform dangerous work in the shadows.fstop123/E+ via Getty Images

“We stopped doing heads.”

It was the second time I’d heard a medical examiner say this while I was studying how the roles of medical...

Read more: Medical examiners and coroners have borne a heavy burden during the COVID-19 pandemic and have...

Buddhist nuns and female scholars are gaining new leadership roles, in a tradition that began with the ordination of Buddha's foster mother

  • Written by Jue Liang, Visiting Assistant Professor, Denison University
imageNuns from Taiwan pray in Taipei on May 8, 2011, in celebration of the Buddha's birth anniversary. Patrick Lin/AFP via Getty Images

In recent years, many Buddhist nuns have taken on leadership roles that require either ordination status or academic degrees, all of which was quite unheard of in Buddhist monastic traditions in the past.

However, this...

Read more: Buddhist nuns and female scholars are gaining new leadership roles, in a tradition that began with...

Figuring out omicron – here's what scientists are doing right now to understand the new coronavirus variant

  • Written by Peter Kasson, Associate Professor of Molecular Physiology and Biomedical Engineering, University of Virginia
imageA researcher works with COVID-19 samples from patients.Thomas Samson/AFP via Getty Images

Scientists around the world have been racing to learn more about the new omicron strain of SARS-CoV-2, first declared a “variant of concern” on Nov. 26, 2021 by the World Health Organization. Officials cautioned that it would take several weeks...

Read more: Figuring out omicron – here's what scientists are doing right now to understand the new...

A century of tragedy: How the car and gas industry knew about the health risks of leaded fuel but sold it for 100 years anyway

  • Written by Bill Kovarik, Professor of Communication, Radford University
imageFor decades, most gas sold in the U.S. contained a lead additive. Per Magnus Persson via Getty Images

On the frosty morning of Dec. 9, 1921, in Dayton, Ohio, researchers at a General Motors lab poured a new fuel blend into one of their test engines. Immediately, the engine began running more quietly and putting out more power.

The new fuel was...

Read more: A century of tragedy: How the car and gas industry knew about the health risks of leaded fuel but...

Many global charities refrain from 'poverty porn' imagery to raise money from donors, but stereotypes still distort their pictures

  • Written by Abhishek Bhati, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Bowling Green State University
imageCharity fundraising materials often include stereotypical images of life in low-income countries.Mlenny/E+ via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

International nongovernmental organizations, often called NGOs, and other charities often use photos that distort the everyday realities of the...

Read more: Many global charities refrain from 'poverty porn' imagery to raise money from donors, but...

Trans people have a long history in Appalachia -- but politicians prefer to ignore it

  • Written by G. Samantha Rosenthal, Associate Professor of History, Roanoke College
imageParents and activists who support transgender rights rally before a school board meeting on Aug. 10, 2021, in Ashburn, Virginia.Ricky Carioti/The Washington Post via Getty Images

In recent public debate throughout the South, transness – the fact of being transgender – is framed as a kind of new social contagion.

Count me among the...

Read more: Trans people have a long history in Appalachia -- but politicians prefer to ignore it

4 Ph.D. neuroscience students from other countries share the challenges of studying in the US

  • Written by Thiago Arzua, Ph.D. Candidate in Neuroscience, Medical College of Wisconsin
imageInternational students in the U.S. often face restrictions that make it hard to advance their research careers at the graduate level and beyond.Klaus Vedfelt/DigitalVision via Getty Images

International students make important contributions to the U.S. They can enrich scientific research through diversity of thought. They pay taxes, support...

Read more: 4 Ph.D. neuroscience students from other countries share the challenges of studying in the US

How Cup Noodles became one of the biggest transpacific business success stories of all time

  • Written by Alisa Freedman, Professor of Japanese Literature, Cultural Studies and Gender, University of Oregon
imageThe original Japanese packaging emphasized English characters over Japanese ones.Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

See a container of Cup Noodles at a convenience store and you might think of dorm rooms and cheap calories.

But there was a time when eating from the product’s iconic packaging exuded cosmopolitanism, when the on-the-go meal symbolized...

Read more: How Cup Noodles became one of the biggest transpacific business success stories of all time

Nuns against nuclear weapons – Plowshares protesters have fought for disarmament for over 40 years, going to prison for peace

  • Written by Carole Sargent, Literary Historian, Georgetown University
imageSister Megan Rice answers questions from members of a church group at a home in Maryville, Tennessee, in 2013.Linda Davidson / The Washington Post via Getty Images

In July 2012 Sister Megan Rice, an 82-year-old Catholic nun, and two men walked past multiple broken security cameras and into the heart of a high-security nuclear complex. Y-12 in Oak...

Read more: Nuns against nuclear weapons – Plowshares protesters have fought for disarmament for over 40...

Women lead religious groups in many ways – besides the growing number who have been ordained

  • Written by Deborah Whitehead, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Colorado Boulder
imageRabbi Diana Villa, center, with colleagues at the Schechter Institute of Jewish Studies, in Jerusalem, in 2013.AP Photo/Sebastian Scheiner

What constitutes women’s leadership in religious communities is open to many interpretations. In the U.S., more attention has been given to women’s ordination because of the highly public and visible...

Read more: Women lead religious groups in many ways – besides the growing number who have been ordained

More Articles ...

  1. Why Biden's threat to slap Russia with more sanctions is unlikely to deter Putin in Ukraine
  2. Michigan school shooting shows how violence can transition from online threats to real-world tragedy
  3. Grammy winner explains why Adele is right -- album tracks should not be shuffled
  4. Stephen Sondheim's 'Assassins' lays bare the bizarre role of guns in American culture
  5. Diversity helps nonprofits accomplish more when staff from different backgrounds can connect
  6. Making a difference without millions – how Americans give
  7. In the fight against climate change, China is doing more than you think – but still not enough
  8. California's water supplies are in trouble as climate change worsens natural dry spells, especially in the Sierra Nevada
  9. How Christmas became an American holiday tradition, with a Santa Claus, gifts and a tree
  10. Modern-day culture wars are playing out on historic tours of slaveholding plantations
  11. How did Uncle Sam become a symbol for the United States?
  12. Why addressing racism against Black women in health care is key to ending the US HIV epidemic
  13. An expert draws 7 lessons about US gun laws from the murder of Ahmaud Arbery and the Rittenhouse verdict
  14. Consumers value a product viewed online more if they see it being virtually touched
  15. How dual loyalties created an ethics problem for Chris Cuomo and CNN
  16. Plastic trash in the ocean is a global problem, and the US is the top source – a new report urges action
  17. Hacer listas de mercado y poner la mesa puede mejorar el vocabulario y las ganas de aprender en los niños latinos
  18. Political rage: America survived a decade of anger in the 18th century – but can it now?
  19. 'The Beatles: Get Back' glosses over the band's acrimonious end
  20. Pregnancy apps and online spaces fail to support individuals grieving a pregnancy loss – here's what to do about it
  21. Why do couples use baby talk with one another?
  22. How can scientists update coronavirus vaccines for omicron? A microbiologist answers 5 questions about how Moderna and Pfizer could rapidly adjust mRNA vaccines
  23. Is your state ready to handle the influx of federal funds for expanding broadband?
  24. How a Supreme Court decision limiting access to abortion could harm the economy and women's well-being
  25. Why COVID-19 must be included in safer sex messaging on college campuses
  26. Use of HIV prevention treatments is very low among Southern Black gay men
  27. Sea otters demonstrate that there is more to muscle than just movement – it can also bring the heat
  28. Female faculty of color do extra diversity work for no extra reward – here's how to fix that
  29. School shootings are at a record high this year – but they can be prevented
  30. Victims of domestic abuse find no haven in family courts
  31. The US biofuel mandate helps farmers, but does little for energy security and harms the environment
  32. Supreme Court signals shift on abortion – but will it strike down Roe or leave it to states to decide when 'personhood' occurs?
  33. Most school shooters get their guns from home – and during the pandemic, the number of firearms in households with teenagers went up
  34. How the US census led to the first data processing company 125 years ago – and kick-started America’s computing industry
  35. Charting changes in a pathogen's genome yields clues about its past and hints about its future
  36. Independent commissions can ditch partisanship and make redistricting fairer to voters
  37. Aaron Rodgers dropped the ball on critical thinking – with a little practice you can do better
  38. Small-group learning can mitigate the effects of school closures – but only if teachers use it well
  39. HIV prevention pill PrEP is now free under most insurance plans – but the latest challenge to the Affordable Care Act puts this benefit at risk
  40. Biden brings a menorah lighting back to the White House, rededicating a Hanukkah tradition from the 20th century
  41. This Hanukkah, learn about the holiday's forgotten heroes: Women
  42. Who's in? Who's out? The ethics of COVID-19 travel rules
  43. What the public doesn't get: Anti-CRT lawmakers are passing pro-CRT laws
  44. Quitting your job or thinking about joining the ‘great resignation’? Here's what an employment lawyer advises
  45. Will omicron – the new coronavirus variant of concern – be more contagious than delta? A virus evolution expert explains what researchers know and what they don't
  46. Charitable gifts from donor-advised funds favor education and religion
  47. Giving Tuesday: Charitable gifts from donor-advised funds favor education and religion
  48. 2021 Atlantic hurricane season showed the US isn’t prepared for climate-related disasters that push people deeper into poverty
  49. When 'hunker down' isn't an option: The 2021 Atlantic hurricane season showed how low-income communities face the highest risks
  50. 'Hunker down' is not enough: 2021 hurricane season showed US isn't prepared as climate-related disasters push people deeper into poverty