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2020 census miscounted Americans – 4 questions answered

  • Written by Aggie Yellow Horse, Assistant Professor of Asian Pacific American Studies, Arizona State University
imageCensus takers went door to door in 2020, as in past years, seeking to make the count as accurate as possible.AP Photo/John Raoux

_The census conducted in the U.S. every 10 years is meant to count everyone. But it doesn’t actually count everyone.

After every census, the U.S. Census Bureau reports how well it did at counting every person in the...

Read more: 2020 census miscounted Americans – 4 questions answered

Asian American mothers confront multiple crises of pandemic, anti-Asian hate and caregiving

  • Written by Miliann Kang, Professor of Women, Gender, Sexuality Studies, UMass Amherst
imageOn March 16, 2022, more than a hundred people attended the Justice for Asian Women Rally in New York City. Lev Radin/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

In memory of the Atlanta massage spas shootings on March 16, 2021, that killed eight people, including six Asian women, communities around the country gathered a year later to mourn and...

Read more: Asian American mothers confront multiple crises of pandemic, anti-Asian hate and caregiving

#OscarsSoWhite still plagues Hollywood's highest achievement awards

  • Written by Frederick Gooding, Jr., Dr. Ronald E. Moore Professor of Humanities and African American Studies, Texas Christian University
imageAcademy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs attends the Celebration of Black Cinema on Dec. 2, 2019, in Los Angeles.Randy Shropshire/Getty Images for the Celebration of Black Cinema

Four Black actors were nominated for Oscars in 2022, six years after the Twitter campaign #OscarsSoWhite rocked Hollywood.

In the long history of Hollywood snubs, the Academ...

Read more: #OscarsSoWhite still plagues Hollywood's highest achievement awards

Even after lockdowns eased, pandemic depression persisted across social classes – new study

  • Written by Catherine Ettman, PhD Candidate, Boston University
imageThe high and persistent prevalence of depression suggests that mental illness increased for all social classes during the COVID-19 pandemic.piola666/E+ via Getty Images

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

The big idea

One year into the COVID-19 pandemic, we found that more than 1 in 5 U.S. adults reported probable...

Read more: Even after lockdowns eased, pandemic depression persisted across social classes – new study

In Egypt, where a meal isn’t complete without bread, war in Ukraine is threatening the wheat supply and access to this staple food

  • Written by Jessica Barnes, Associate Professor of Geography, University of South Carolina
imageA man carries a tray of freshly baked bread outside a bread factory on Dec. 15, 2016, in Cairo.Chris McGrath/Getty Images

Russia’s war on Ukraine is disrupting global grain supplies. Restrictions on navigation in the Azov Sea and the closure of ports have interrupted grain shipments from Russia, the world’s largest wheat exporter, and...

Read more: In Egypt, where a meal isn’t complete without bread, war in Ukraine is threatening the wheat...

Longer naps in the day may be an early sign of dementia in older adults

  • Written by Yue Leng, Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, University of California, San Francisco
imageOlder adults who nap at least once for more than an hour a day have a 40% higher chance of developing dementia.ozgurdonmaz/E+ via Getty Images

Doctors often recommend “power naps” as a way to compensate for a poor night’s sleep and help keep alert until bedtime. But for older adults, extensive power naps could be an early sign of...

Read more: Longer naps in the day may be an early sign of dementia in older adults

When Putin says Russia and Ukraine share one faith, he's leaving out a lot of the story

  • Written by Kathryn David, Mellon Assistant Professor of Russian and East European Studies, Vanderbilt University
imageA Ukrainian service member takes a photograph of a damaged church after shelling in a residential district in Mariupol, Ukraine, March 10, 2022. AP Photo/Evgeniy Maloletka

Russian President Vladimir Putin has often asserted that Russians and Ukrainians are “one people.” He points to a few factors: the Russian language spoken widely in...

Read more: When Putin says Russia and Ukraine share one faith, he's leaving out a lot of the story

Drugs that treat opioid use disorder are a good use for multibillion-dollar settlement funds

  • Written by Elizabeth Chiarello, Associate Professor of Sociology, Saint Louis University
imageDr. Laura Kehoe gives a presentation about why emergency room physicians should prescribe buprenorphine for people recovering from opioid overdoses.Jonathan Wiggs/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

States, cities, counties and tribal governmentsacross the nation will soon receive a windfall through several major opioid settlements. Drug distributors...

Read more: Drugs that treat opioid use disorder are a good use for multibillion-dollar settlement funds

With threats of nuclear war and climate disaster growing, America's 'bunker fantasy' is woefully inadequate

  • Written by David L. Pike, Professor of Literature, American University

At the end of the Academy Award-nominated film “Don’t Look Up,” with a meteor hurtling toward Earth, the movie’s three scientist-protagonists gather with family and friends for a last supper around a dinner table in central Michigan.

Having exhausted their efforts at action, they eat the food they’ve prepared and...

Read more: With threats of nuclear war and climate disaster growing, America's 'bunker fantasy' is woefully...

Madeleine Albright saw US as an ‘indispensable nation’ and NATO expansion eastward as essential

  • Written by Peter Harris, Associate Professor of Political Science, Colorado State University
imageHelping forge a post-Cold War identity for the United States.Alberto Pizzoli/Sygma/Sygma via Getty Images

Madeleine Albright may have not coined the phrase “indispensable nation,” but she will always be associated with the concept.

By the time she became Secretary of State in 1997, the United States had become a beached superpower....

Read more: Madeleine Albright saw US as an ‘indispensable nation’ and NATO expansion eastward as essential

More Articles ...

  1. Would gas tax breaks make a big difference when prices are skyrocketing? We asked 4 experts
  2. Ketanji Brown Jackson's Supreme Court hearing is a flashback to how race and crime featured during Thurgood Marshall's 1967 hearings
  3. Vaccine hesitancy is complicating physicians' obligation to respect patient autonomy during the COVID-19 pandemic
  4. New data-sharing requirements from the National Institutes of Health are a big step toward more open science – and potentially higher-quality research
  5. March Madness stars can now cash in on endorsements – but some limits set by states and universities may still be unconstitutional
  6. How much is the media buzz from a March Madness Cinderella run worth to a school like Saint Peter's?
  7. How fairy tales shape fighting spirit: Ukraine's children hear bedtime stories of underdog heroes, while Russian children hear tales of magical success
  8. Tornadoes, climate change and why Dixie is the new Tornado Alley
  9. Why the future of the world's largest religion is female – and African
  10. An emphasis on brilliance creates a toxic, dog-eat-dog workplace atmosphere that discourages women
  11. Ketanji Brown Jackson’s path to Supreme Court nomination was paved by trailblazing Black women judges
  12. Biden's plain speaking on Ukraine inspires support without sparking a wider war – an echo of the Truman Doctrine, 75 years ago
  13. Colleges routinely fail to ask about new hires' history of sexual harassment
  14. Food pantries that give away stuff people can't or won't cook have an 'acorn squash problem'
  15. Putin's control over Ukraine war news is not total - it's challenged by online news and risk-taking journalists
  16. In ‘Licorice Pizza’ a 15-year-old and 25-year-old fall for each other – here's what's known about these types of relationships
  17. El olor de la enfermedad: El uso de perros, ratones y hurones para detectar padecimientos
  18. Economic sanctions may make Russians' lives worse – without stopping Putin's assault on Ukraine
  19. What is the new COVID-19 variant BA.2, and will it cause another wave of infections in the US?
  20. SEC proposes far-reaching climate disclosure rules for companies – here’s where the rules may be vulnerable to legal challenges
  21. Defending Europe: How cultural identity shapes support for Ukraine and armed resistance against Russia
  22. An expert on trends in gun sales and gun violence in pandemic America
  23. The 'hot hand' is a real basketball phenomenon – but only some players have the ability to go on these basket-making streaks
  24. Older Americans are given the wrong idea about online safety – here's how to help them help themselves
  25. ‘I wanted a professor like me’ – a hip-hop artist explains his turn to academia
  26. Kyiv's Jews, persecuted under Polish-Lithuanian, Russian, Nazi and Soviet regimes, now face the onslaught of Putin's forces
  27. Abortion pills are just as safe to prescribe based on a patient's medical history as after an in-person exam, new research finds
  28. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson faces confirmation hearings: 7 questions answered
  29. How a few geothermal plants could solve America's lithium supply crunch and boost the EV battery industry
  30. Why is Russia's church backing Putin's war? Church-state history gives a clue
  31. Maps show – and hide – key information about Ukraine war
  32. 6 wildfire terms to understand, from red flag warning to 100% containment
  33. Fewer Americans are hunting, and that raises hard questions about funding conservation through gun sales
  34. Ukraine's women fighters reflect a cultural tradition of feminist independence
  35. Why weren't women allowed to act in Shakespeare's plays?
  36. Ukraine's economy went from Soviet chaos to oligarch domination to vital global trader of wheat and neon – and now Russian devastation
  37. Russia's energy clout doesn't just come from oil and gas – it's also a key nuclear supplier
  38. Some states are making it harder to vote, some are making it easier – but it's too soon to say if this will affect voter turnout in 2022
  39. Why pregnant people should get vaccinated for COVID-19 – a maternal care expert explains
  40. The West thinks that Russians, suffering from sanctions, will end up abandoning Putin – but history indicates they won't
  41. Calling Asians 'robotic' is a racist stereotype with a long, troubled history
  42. Who are the Jesuits?
  43. A large solar storm could knock out the power grid and the internet – an electrical engineer explains how
  44. How prosthetic penises in shows like HBO's 'Minx' reinforce existing stereotypes and taboos
  45. How poetry can help people get through hard times – 4 essential reads
  46. Lasso-ing Chelsea FC? Why super-rich US sports owners are looking to buy a London soccer team
  47. Ukraine's foreign fighters have little in common with those who signed up to fight in the Spanish Civil War
  48. Ukraine is benefiting from generous donations – and many other global causes need help, too
  49. Russia’s no longer a ‘most-favored nation’: 5 questions about the coveted trading status answered
  50. Why Crimean Tatars are fearful as Russia invades Ukraine