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Mexico wants internet access for all. Getting everyone online could reduce poverty, too

  • Written by Jack J. Barry, Postdoctoral research associate, University of Connecticut
Mexicans surf the web at a 'digital village' in Mexico City in 2015, part of the country's effort to get all citizens online.AP Photo/Sofia Jaramillo

The internet has been a right in Mexico since the nation’s Constitution was amended in 2013 to guarantee universal online access.

Yet just 47 percent of households there reported having internet...

Read more: Mexico wants internet access for all. Getting everyone online could reduce poverty, too

College-educated cops enforce the law more aggressively

  • Written by Richard Wright, Regents' Professor of Criminal Justice and Criminology, Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, Georgia State University
Some police reform efforts encourage stations to hire more educated officers.vchal/shutterstock.com

In the wake of controversial and widely publicized incidents involving the use of deadly force by the police against racial and ethnic minorities, President Obama appointed the President’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing in 2015 to propose...

Read more: College-educated cops enforce the law more aggressively

Smoking rates in US have fallen to all-time low, but how did they ever get so high?

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
This ad featuring then-actor Ronald Reagan is an example of industry advertising that made smoking so popular.University of California San Francisco Tobacco Archives, CC BY-SA

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention calls cigarette smoking “the leading cause of preventable disease and death in the U.S., accounting for over 480,000...

Read more: Smoking rates in US have fallen to all-time low, but how did they ever get so high?

Social Security helped slash elderly poverty to 9.2 percent in the 20th century – that triumph is now in jeopardy

  • Written by David W. Rasmussen, James H. Gapinski Professor of Economics, Florida State University
More elderly people may soon be pinching pennies.docent/Shutterstock.com

In 1959, more than a third of all elderly Americans lived in poverty. Slashing that number to under 10 percent by the late 1990s was among the great U.S. triumphs of the 20th century. Social Security deserves a large share of the credit.

I believe eliminating old-age poverty...

Read more: Social Security helped slash elderly poverty to 9.2 percent in the 20th century – that triumph is...

US complicity in the Saudi-led genocide in Yemen spans Obama, Trump administrations

  • Written by Jeff Bachman, Professorial Lecturer in Human Rights; Director, Ethics, Peace, and Human Rights MA Program, American University School of International Service

A Saudi-led coalition of states has been aggressively bombing Yemen and imposing an air and naval blockade of its ports for more than three years, leading U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres to describe Yemen as “the world’s worst humanitarian crisis.”

Guterres put the crisis in stark perspective, emphasizing the near complete...

Read more: US complicity in the Saudi-led genocide in Yemen spans Obama, Trump administrations

Climate change is driving wildfires, and not just in California

  • Written by Jonathan Overpeck, Samual A. Graham Dean, and William B. Stapp Collegiate Professor of Environmental Education, School for Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan
Smoke billows from the High Park wildfire west of Fort Collins, Colo., on June 11, 2012, a year of historic drought across much of the western United States.AP Photo/Ed Andrieski

Rains in northern California have helped firefighters contain the Camp Fire, which now ranks as the state’s most deadly wildfire. But unfortunately, all signs point...

Read more: Climate change is driving wildfires, and not just in California

When you're grateful, your brain becomes more charitable

  • Written by Christina Karns, Research Associate in Psychology and the Center for Brain Injury Research and Training; Director of Emotions and Neuroplasticity Project, University of Oregon
Volunteering at a food bank is one way people feel rewarded by giving.AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

‘Tis the season when the conversation shifts to what you’re thankful for. Gathered with family and friends around a holiday feast, for instance, people may recount some of the biggies – like their health or their children – or...

Read more: When you're grateful, your brain becomes more charitable

Inspired by sci-fi, an airplane with no moving parts and a blue ionic glow

  • Written by Steven Barrett, Professor of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
A time-lapse image showing the plane flying across a gymnasium.Steven Barrett, MIT, CC BY-ND

Since their invention more than 100 years ago, airplanes have been moved through the air by the spinning surfaces of propellers or turbines. But watching science fiction movies like the “Star Wars,” “Star Trek” and “Back to the...

Read more: Inspired by sci-fi, an airplane with no moving parts and a blue ionic glow

La publicidad diseñó el Día de Acción de Gracias tal y como se conoce hoy

  • Written by Samantha N. N. Cross, Associate Professor of Marketing, Iowa State University
Para las marcas que venden pastel de calabaza, como Borden’s, Snowfrift y Mrs. Smith, el Día de Acción de Gracias es un mercado importante.Jean Beaufort

Siempre he sentido curiosidad por el Día de Acción de Gracias: por las tradiciones, la comida y la idea de un día festivo en Estados Unidos que trata...

Read more: La publicidad diseñó el Día de Acción de Gracias tal y como se conoce hoy

Virtual reality tours give rural students a glimpse of college life

  • Written by Carol Cutler White, Assistant Professor, Community College Leadership, Mississippi State University
Students at Person High School use cardboard goggles to take a virtual tour of University of North Carolina campuses. Person County Schools, Author provided

The first time that Nyah visited the University of North Carolina at Greensboro for a campus tour, there wasn’t much of a chance to see what takes place inside the classrooms.

“We...

Read more: Virtual reality tours give rural students a glimpse of college life

More Articles ...

  1. The government aims to boost ethanol without evidence that it saves money or helps the environment
  2. Why bigotry is a public health problem
  3. Amazon's move will gentrify neighborhoods – at what social cost?
  4. Rock 'n' roll is dying in Bangladesh
  5. In the 1600s Hester Pulter wondered, 'Why must I forever be confined?' – now her poems are online for all to see
  6. Blockchain systems are tracking food safety and origins
  7. Wildfire smoke is becoming a nationwide health threat
  8. Why do Black Friday shoppers throw punches over bargains? A marketing expert explains 'psychological ownership'
  9. Kavanaugh's impact on the Supreme Court and the country may not be as profound as predicted
  10. Preventing infant deaths: The ABCs of safe baby sleep
  11. Fear, more than hate, feeds online bigotry and real-world violence
  12. Parks help cities – but only if people use them
  13. Better forest management won't end wildfires, but it can reduce the risks – here's how
  14. Not everyone wants their donations touted on Facebook or plastered on walls
  15. New dates for ancient stone tools in China point to local invention of complex technology
  16. Superar el cáncer para morir por sobredosis: la vida difícil de las mujeres en los montes Apalaches
  17. Flying with emotional support animals: The ups and downs of life in coach
  18. Lies, damn lies and post-truth
  19. Technology giants didn't deserve public trust in the first place
  20. A sharing economy for plants: Seed libraries are sprouting up
  21. Why people become vegans: The history, sex and science of a meatless existence
  22. Why the Pilgrims were actually able to survive
  23. 3 ethical reasons for vaccinating your children
  24. Accelerating health care innovation by connecting engineering and medicine
  25. The equivalence test: A new way for scientists to tackle so-called negative results
  26. Domicology: A new way to fight blight before buildings are even constructed
  27. Using your phone on a plane is safe – but for now you still can't make calls
  28. Awareness of food waste can help us appreciate holiday meals
  29. What Trump's picks for the Presidential Medal of Freedom say about him
  30. The psychological differences between those who love and those who loathe Black Friday shopping
  31. An economist talks turkey: 5 facts about Thanksgiving pricing
  32. Un condado de Idaho, en EEUU, ofreció papeletas en español por primera vez y esto es lo que pasó
  33. Why is this line so long?
  34. How fierce fall and winter winds help fuel California fires
  35. Yes, GPS apps make you worse at navigating – but that's OK
  36. Transgender Americans still face workplace discrimination despite some progress and support of companies like Apple
  37. You can't characterize human nature if studies overlook 85 percent of people on Earth
  38. What is augmented reality, anyway?
  39. Before the tragedy at Jonestown, the people of Peoples Temple had a dream
  40. Los padres primerizos usan las redes sociales para entender su nuevo papel
  41. Dozens of migrants disappear in Mexico as Central American caravan pushes northward
  42. How anti-black bias in white men hurts black men's health
  43. A vaccine that could block mosquitoes from transmitting malaria
  44. Why are some Americans changing their names?
  45. Sci-fi movies are the secret weapon that could help Silicon Valley grow up
  46. Maine congressional election an important test of ranked-choice voting
  47. Why covering the environment is one of the most dangerous beats in journalism
  48. Fine particle air pollution is a public health emergency hiding in plain sight
  49. 3 ways the women's movement in US politics is misunderstood
  50. Why politicians are the real winners in Amazon's HQ2 bidding war