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Fed up with Big Beer's incursion, independent craft breweries push back

  • Written by Ellis Jones, Assistant Professor of Sociology, College of the Holy Cross
Many enthusiasts judge craft beer by more than its flavor. Rawpixel.com/Shutterstock.com

A new seal began to appear on bottles and cans of American craft beer in 2017. It both certifies that the beer came from one of the nation’s independently owned and small-scale breweries and signals that these upstarts are fighting back against the...

Read more: Fed up with Big Beer's incursion, independent craft breweries push back

Debunking 3 myths behind 'chain migration' and 'low-skilled' immigrants

  • Written by Raquel Aldana, Associate Vice Chancellor for Academic Diversity and Professor of Law, University of California, Davis
A U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services naturalization ceremony.AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee

President Donald Trump has embraced the rhetoric of “chain migration” to spread the message that the United States is legally letting in too many of the wrong kind of immigrant.

That term, however, distorts the facts.

As a scholar on U.S....

Read more: Debunking 3 myths behind 'chain migration' and 'low-skilled' immigrants

Are autonomous cars really safer than human drivers?

  • Written by Peter Hancock, Professor of Psychology, Civil and Environmental Engineering, and Industrial Engineering and Management Systems, University of Central Florida
A key factor is how well people and machines can avoid crashes.Tempe Police Department via AP

Much of the push toward self-driving cars has been underwritten by the hope that they will save lives by getting involved in fewer crashes with fewer injuries and deaths than human-driven cars. But so far, most comparisons between human drivers and...

Read more: Are autonomous cars really safer than human drivers?

Does energy storage make the electric grid cleaner?

  • Written by Naga Srujana Goteti, PhD Student in Energy and Sustainabiltiy, Rochester Institute of Technology
Solar and wind compete with coal power plants when it comes to energy storage systems. AP Photo/Mel Evans

Carbon-free energy: Is the answer blowing in the wind? Perhaps, but the wind doesn’t always blow, nor does the sun always shine. The energy generated by wind and solar power is intermittent, meaning that the generated electricity goes up...

Read more: Does energy storage make the electric grid cleaner?

Does college turn people into liberals?

  • Written by Matthew J. Mayhew, William Ray and Marie Adamson Flesher Professor of Educational Administration, The Ohio State University
A new study reveals that students gain an appreciation for views across the political spectrum during their first year in college.Shutterstock.com

Does going to college make students into political liberals?

Conservative activists have claimed that universities brainwash students and indoctrinate them into believing a liberal ideology. The line of...

Read more: Does college turn people into liberals?

As Arctic sea ice shrinks, new research shows how much energy polar bears use to find food

  • Written by Anthony Pagano, PhD Candidate, University of California, Santa Cruz
A polar bear breaks through think Arctic ice.USGS

Polar bears live in a remote and inhospitable environment far from most human settlements. For most biologists, opportunities to observe these animals are fleeting. In fact, scientists’ main resources for understanding basic behaviors of polar bears on sea ice are observations of polar bear...

Read more: As Arctic sea ice shrinks, new research shows how much energy polar bears use to find food

How kindness can make a difference in cancer care

  • Written by Leonard L. Berry, University Distinguished Professor of Marketing, Mays Business School; Senior Fellow, Institute for Healthcare Improvement, Texas A&M University
In this Dec. 3, 2014 photo, liver cancer patient Crispin Lopez Serrano talks to an oncology nurse at a hospital in Clackamas, Ore.AP Photo/Gosia Wozniacka

Cancer may not be life-ending, but it usually is life-changing. A cancer diagnosis instantaneously turns life upside down for patients and families. Cancer care is a “high-emotion”...

Read more: How kindness can make a difference in cancer care

#MeToo is riding a new wave of feminism in India

  • Written by Alka Kurian, Senior Lecturer, School of Interdisciplinary Arts and Sciences, University of Washington, Bothell

Reading other women’s #MeToo stories brings back memories of my sexual abuse as a young girl growing up in the late 1970s and 1980s in India.

Like many women, I couldn’t talk about it then. India had a tradition-bound society with strict gender norms and expectations. But a lot has changed since.

A new and powerful anti-sexism movement...

Read more: #MeToo is riding a new wave of feminism in India

How lotto scammers defraud elderly Americans and fuel gang wars in Jamaica

  • Written by Damion Blake, Assistant Professor of Politics and Policy Studies, Elon University

Normally, January and February are high season for the Jamaican beach city of Montego Bay. But this year, an upsurge in shootings and other violent crime has lead many sunseekers to steer clear.

On Jan. 18, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness declared a state of emergency in Montego Bay and surrounding St. James Parish. Hotels, restaurants,...

Read more: How lotto scammers defraud elderly Americans and fuel gang wars in Jamaica

More Articles ...

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  2. Why I teach a course called 'White Racism'
  3. Charity and taxes: 4 questions answered
  4. The deepest-dwelling fish in the sea is small, pink and delicate
  5. A century ago, progressives were the ones shouting 'fake news'
  6. How Facebook could really fix itself
  7. The education of Ursula Le Guin
  8. Why colleges must change how they teach calculus
  9. What employers can do to stop the next Larry Nassar
  10. Americans are saving energy by staying at home
  11. How mass incarceration harms U.S. health, in 5 charts
  12. Online social networks can help fight social anxiety
  13. Want to be president of Mexico? There's an app for that
  14. 3 key quotes from Trump's first State of the Union, explained
  15. Why Amazon and friends' plan could be a major disrupter of health care system
  16. Trump's path to citizenship for 1.8 million will leave out nearly half of all Dreamers
  17. Can scientists learn to make 'nature forecasts' just as we forecast the weather?
  18. Talent doesn't explain the success of the Patriots and Eagles
  19. California's other drought: A major earthquake is overdue
  20. The art of the public apology
  21. The hidden history of black nationalist women's political activism
  22. Nassar's abuse reflects more than 50 years of men's power over female athletes
  23. Here's how workers would spend the corporate tax cut – if they had a voice
  24. Promising male birth control pill has its origin in an arrow poison
  25. Why ignoring mental health needs of young Syrian refugees could harm us all
  26. Why it's too soon for Davos billionaires to toast Trump's 'pro-business' policies
  27. Presidential corruption verdict shows just how flawed Brazil's justice system is
  28. Trump's travel ban is just one of many US policies that legalize discrimination against Muslims
  29. Millions of refugees could benefit from big data – but we're not using it
  30. What happened at Davos? 8 essential reads
  31. How should we decide what to do?
  32. Why don't STEM majors vote as much as others?
  33. Corporate sponsors of Olympians enter the #MeToo fray
  34. Artificial intelligence is the weapon of the next Cold War
  35. Violent past, digital future: Angela Merkel's remarks at Davos
  36. Macron calls for a 'global contract' at Davos
  37. Davos grapples with inequality
  38. What Trump’s every-country-for-itself rhetoric gets wrong about Davos
  39. 3 strategies today's activist women share with their foremothers
  40. Inside North Korea's literary fiction factory
  41. Does America have a caste system?
  42. Can mirrors boost solar panel output - and help overcome Trump's tariffs?
  43. The comeback and dangers of the drug GHB
  44. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin's weak-dollar myopia is dangerous
  45. Macron's pledge to wipe out coal is just as meaningless as Trump's plan to revive it
  46. Fossil jawbone from Israel is the oldest modern human found outside Africa
  47. Why climate change is worsening public health problems
  48. The state of the US solar industry: 5 questions answered
  49. For a North Korean refugee raising her kids in the UK, the past is never far
  50. I visited the Rohingya refugee camps and here is what Bangladesh is doing right