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Parole and probation have grown far beyond resources allocated to support them

  • Written by Vincent Schiraldi, Co-Director, Columbia University Justice Lab, Senior Research Scientist, Columbia School of Social Work, Columbia University
San Bernardino County Probation officers search a parolee room for drugs and arms.AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes

Today, there are twice as many people supervised on parole or probation as are incarcerated in the U.S.

Parole is a period of being supervised in the community following early release from prison for following the rules. Probation is a period...

Read more: Parole and probation have grown far beyond resources allocated to support them

Zimbabwe's coup did not create democracy from dictatorship

  • Written by Steven Feldstein, Frank and Bethine Church Chair of Public Affairs & Associate Professor, School of Public Service, Boise State University

Many citizens and international observers cautiously hoped that the southern African nation of Zimbabwe would find its way from dictatorship to democracy this year. President Robert Mugabe was militarily removed from office in November 2017 after 37 years in office, opening the door for the country’s first real leadership transition since...

Read more: Zimbabwe's coup did not create democracy from dictatorship

Is there such a thing as a stress-free school lunch? Here's how to pack one

  • Written by Molly Paulson, Clinical Instructor, Georgia State University
A main course of a complex carbohydrate and protein is important for kids' lunches, rounded out by fruits, vegetables and water.baibaz/Shutterstock.com

With the school year starting again, it’s time to start to think about the routine of packing school lunches. For many time-pressed parents, this is a formidable task.

But it doesn’t need...

Read more: Is there such a thing as a stress-free school lunch? Here's how to pack one

What are rare earths, crucial elements in modern technology? 4 questions answered

  • Written by Stanley Mertzman, Professor of Geosciences, Franklin & Marshall College
A handful of europium.Alchemist-hp, CC BY-SA

Most Americans use rare earth elements every day – without knowing it, or knowing anything about what they do. That could change, as these unusual materials are becoming a focal point in the escalating trade war between the U.S. and China.

Stanley Mertzman, a geologist whose specialty is X-ray...

Read more: What are rare earths, crucial elements in modern technology? 4 questions answered

Charlottesville belies racism's deep roots in the North

  • Written by Brian J Purnell, Associate Professor of Africana Studies and History, Bowdoin College
The KKK assembled in Portland, Maine, in 1923.Library of Congress

A southern city has now become synonymous with the ongoing scourge of racism in the United States.

A year ago, white supremacists rallied to “Unite the Right” in Charlottesville, protesting the removal of a Confederate statute.

In the days that followed, two of them,...

Read more: Charlottesville belies racism's deep roots in the North

Bio-based plastics can reduce waste, but only if we invest in both making and getting rid of them

  • Written by Danny Ducat, Assistant Professor of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Michigan State University
Food packaging is one of the top uses for plastic in consumer goods.BravissimoS

With news that companies like Starbucks, Hyatt and Marriott have agreed to ban plastic straws, it’s a fitting time to consider the role of plastic in our daily lives. Plastics are an often overlooked modern wonder – cheap and multipurpose substances that can...

Read more: Bio-based plastics can reduce waste, but only if we invest in both making and getting rid of them

I went from prison to professor – here's why criminal records should not be used to keep people out of college

  • Written by Stanley Andrisse, Assistant Professor of Medicine, Howard University
The U.S. leads the world in the rate of incarceration.kittirat roekburi/www.shutterstock.com

Beginning next year, the Common Application – an online form that enables students to apply to the 800 or so colleges that use it – will no longer ask students about their criminal pasts.

As a formerly incarcerated person who now is now an...

Read more: I went from prison to professor – here's why criminal records should not be used to keep people...

Scientists are developing greener plastics – the bigger challenge is moving them from lab to market

  • Written by Richard Gross, Professor of Chemistry, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Used once and done.Michael Coghlan, CC BY-SA

Synthetic plastics have made many aspect of modern life cheaper, safer and more convenient. However, we have failed to figure out how to get rid of them after we use them.

Unlike other forms of trash, such as food and paper, most synthetic plastics cannot be easily degraded by live microorganisms or...

Read more: Scientists are developing greener plastics – the bigger challenge is moving them from lab to market

Cameras can catch cars that run red lights, but that doesn't make streets safer

  • Written by Justin Gallagher, Assistant Professor of Economics, Case Western Reserve University
Many major U.S. cities have hidden cameras to catch drivers who run red lights.Gints Ivuskans/shutterstock

The automobile is a killer. In the U.S., 36,675 people died in traffic accidents in 2014. The year before, 2.3 million people were injured in traffic accidents.

During the past decade, over 438 U.S. municipalities, including 36 of the 50 most...

Read more: Cameras can catch cars that run red lights, but that doesn't make streets safer

More Articles ...

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  5. As a young reporter, I went undercover to expose the Ku Klux Klan
  6. Following Alfred Russel Wallace's footsteps to Borneo, where he penned his seminal evolution paper
  7. Finding nostalgia in the pixelated video games of decades past
  8. Cuatro cosas que puedes hacer para protegerte de la gripe
  9. ¿Por qué los abogados representan a los immigrantes de manera gratuita?
  10. Short-term health plans: A junk solution to a real problem
  11. A Texas city discovered a mass grave of prison laborers. What should it do with the bodies?
  12. Keeping the electricity grid running – 4 essential reads
  13. What Harvard can learn from Texas: A solution to the controversy over affirmative action
  14. From slag to swag: The story of Earl Tupper's fantastic plastics
  15. Why Native Americans struggle to protect their sacred places
  16. How the media falls short in reporting epidemics
  17. Wildfires are inevitable – increasing home losses, fatalities and costs are not
  18. We are guinea pigs in a worldwide experiment on microplastics
  19. ¿Las noticias te estresan? Estas 4 técnicas de entrenamiento mental te ayudarán a calmar el cerebro
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  21. Designed to deceive: How gambling distorts reality and hooks your brain
  22. Immigration activists fighting to abolish ICE have a bigger vision
  23. Saudi women can drive, but are their voices being heard?
  24. The promise of personalized medicine is not for everyone 
  25. Obesity and diabetes: 2 reasons why we should be worried about the plastics that surround us
  26. A socialist's primary win doesn't herald a workers revolution in the US
  27. The start of high school doesn't have to be stressful
  28. America has 1.5 million nonprofits and room for more
  29. The ghost of Roy Orbison goes on tour – and some aren't happy about it
  30. Walmart tried to make sustainability affordable. Here's what happened
  31. Jury finds Monsanto liable in the first Roundup cancer trial – here's what could happen next
  32. ¿Por qué nuestro cerebro siempre encuentra problemas?
  33. How 'story maps' redraw the world using people's real-life experiences
  34. Profit, not free speech, governs media companies' decisions on controversy
  35. Apple's $1 trillion value doesn't mean it's the 'biggest' company
  36. Why Trump shouldn't leverage the government's emergency oil supply to bolster the GOP
  37. What is causing Florida's algae crisis? 5 questions answered
  38. Climate change and wildfires – how do we know if there is a link?
  39. From breast implants to ice cube trays: How silicone took over our kitchens
  40. Flip a switch and shut down seizures? New research suggests how to turn off out-of-control signaling in the brain
  41. Argentina rejects legal abortion — and not all Catholics are celebrating
  42. Heat and Light: Trailer
  43. 5 autores latinos que merecen ser leídos
  44. For universities, making the case for diversity is part of making amends for racist past
  45. How the federal government came to control your car's fuel economy
  46. The case for boosting WNBA player salaries
  47. The world of plastics, in numbers
  48. How pharmacists can help solve medication errors
  49. How new fathers use social media to make sense of their roles
  50. Who are the Sikhs and what are their beliefs?