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Another problem with daylight saving time: The time change raises your risk of hitting deer on the road

  • Written by Tom Langen, Professor of Biology, Clarkson University
imageThe likelihood of hitting a deer is highest during morning and evening twilight.Patrick Pleul/Picture alliance via Getty Images

Daylight saving time ends in the U.S. and Canada on Nov. 7, 2021, and most of us will be setting our clocks back an hour. There is a long-running debate about the benefit of the time change, given how it disrupts...

Read more: Another problem with daylight saving time: The time change raises your risk of hitting deer on the...

Racial discrimination is linked to suicidal thoughts in Black adults and children

  • Written by Janelle R. Goodwill, Assistant Professor of Social Work, Policy, and Practice, University of Chicago
imageResearchers are exploring the impacts that racial discrimination is having on Black Americans' emotional and psychological health.PeopleImages via Getty Images

Frederick Douglass is regarded as one of the most prominent abolitionists the world has ever seen. Alongside his extraordinary contributions as an influential speaker, writer and human...

Read more: Racial discrimination is linked to suicidal thoughts in Black adults and children

Netflix's 'Midnight Mass' joins a long line of horror that plays with Catholic beliefs

  • Written by Regina Hansen, Master Lecturer, Rhetoric, Boston University
imageA still from the Netflix series "Midnight Mass."Eike Schroter/Netflix

Horror and Catholicism have walked hand in hand on screen for almost a century. From Benjamin Christensen’s 1922 film “Häxan” to Mike Flanagan’s 2021 Netflix series “Midnight Mass,” scary films and television shows have portrayed the...

Read more: Netflix's 'Midnight Mass' joins a long line of horror that plays with Catholic beliefs

What American schools can learn from other countries about civic disagreement

  • Written by Ashley Berner, Associate Professor of Education, Johns Hopkins University
imageLearning how to discuss divisive issues and disagree with respect is good for democracy.Mary Altaffer/AP

Few areas of American life have experienced more conflict of late than public education. The conflict has largely revolved around how public schools should deal with the difficult subjects of race and racism. The situation has become so inflamed...

Read more: What American schools can learn from other countries about civic disagreement

Few foundations give groups they support decision-making power on funding priorities

  • Written by Emily Finchum-Mason, Doctoral candidate in Public Policy and Management, University of Washington
imageBringing together people with different perspectives and roles can sharpen an organization's vision.adventtr/iStock / Getty Images Plus

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

The big idea

Eighty-three percent of large U.S. foundations seek input from some of the nonprofits they fund – along with other people,...

Read more: Few foundations give groups they support decision-making power on funding priorities

Why voters rejected plans to replace the Minneapolis Police Department – and what's next for policing reform

  • Written by Michelle S. Phelps, Assistant Professor of Sociology and Law, University of Minnesota
imagePrecincts around where George Floyd was killed voted in favor of disbanding the Minneapolis Police Department.Brandon Bell/Getty Images

Voters in Minneapolis rejected a measure that would have transformed the city’s policing 18 months after the killing of George Floyd thrust the city into the forefront of the police reform debate.

By a 56% to...

Read more: Why voters rejected plans to replace the Minneapolis Police Department – and what's next for...

Why are medieval weapons laws at the center of a US Supreme Court case?

  • Written by Jennifer Tucker, Associate Professor of History and Science in Society, Wesleyan University
imageA gun rights advocate walks through the rotunda of the Kentucky Capitol. Some lawyers argue that the 1689 English Bill of Rights created the legal basis for public carry of weapons in the U.S.Bryan Woolston/Getty Images

In the opening scene of “The Last Duel,” the new film set in 14th-century France, a herald announces the rules for...

Read more: Why are medieval weapons laws at the center of a US Supreme Court case?

The Fed tapers its support for bond markets and the economy – 5 questions answered about what that means

  • Written by Edouard Wemy, Assistant Professor of Economics, Clark University
imageFed Chair Jerome Powell prepares for the end of the era of cheap money. Matt McClain/The Washington Post via AP

The Federal Reserve on Nov. 3, 2021, said it is winding down the bond-buying program it’s had in place since March 2020. The Fed’s policy-setting committee said it would immediately “taper” asset purchases by US$15...

Read more: The Fed tapers its support for bond markets and the economy – 5 questions answered about what that...

Climate change is a justice issue – these 6 charts show why

  • Written by Sonja Klinsky, Associate Professor and Senior Global Futures Scientist, Arizona State University
imageStreet flooding has become a common problem in some communities.wokephoto17/Moment via Getty Images

Climate change has hit home around the world in 2021 with record heat waves, droughts, wildfires and extremestorms. Often, the people suffering most from the effects of climate change are those who have done the least to cause it.

To reduce climate...

Read more: Climate change is a justice issue – these 6 charts show why

Preventing future pandemics starts with recognizing links between human and animal health

  • Written by Deborah Kochevar, Professor of Comparative Pathobiology and Dean Emerita, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine; Senior Fellow, The Fletcher School, Tufts University
imageDisturbing the habitats of horseshoe bats, like these in Borneo, increases the risk of virus spillover.Mike Prince/Flickr, CC BY

The COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated that zoonotic diseases – infections that pass from animals to humans – can present tremendous threats to global health. More than 70% of emerging and reemerging pathogens...

Read more: Preventing future pandemics starts with recognizing links between human and animal health

More Articles ...

  1. Unlike the US, Europe is setting ambitious targets for producing more organic food
  2. Veterans Day: How crosses and mementos help these Marines remember fallen comrades
  3. What is herd immunity? A public health expert and a medical laboratory scientist explain
  4. Small-town Pride celebrations emerge -- and show that LGBTQ life in America is flourishing outside of cities
  5. Why vaccine doses differ for babies, kids, teens and adults – an immunologist explains how your immune system changes as you mature
  6. Women are more competitive when they’re given an option to share winnings – a research finding that may help close the gender pay gap
  7. What the 100 nonprofits that raised the most money in 2020 indicate about charity today
  8. 6 priorities could deliver energy breakthroughs at the Glasgow climate summit – there's progress on some of them already
  9. 6 priorities could deliver energy breakthroughs at the Glasgow climate summit – there's progress on some already
  10. Many scientists are atheists, but that doesn't mean they are anti-religious
  11. How photos of Afghan suffering shown over and over perpetuate inequality and harm
  12. Facebook has a misinformation problem, and is blocking access to data about how much there is and who is affected
  13. The slippery slope of using AI and deepfakes to bring history to life
  14. Why are investors so cocky? They often have a biased memory – and selectively forget their money-losing stocks
  15. Go ahead, enjoy your memes – they really do help ease pandemic stress
  16. University of Florida bans professors from giving expert testimony against state -- a scholar explains the academic freedom issues
  17. The COVID-19 pandemic increased eating disorders among young people – but the signs aren't what parents might expect
  18. The science everyone needs to know about climate change, in 6 charts
  19. Gun rights at the Supreme Court: justices will consider if the fundamental right to keep a gun at home applies to carrying weapons in public
  20. COVID-19 threatens the already shaky status of arts education in schools
  21. A small telescope past Saturn could solve some mysteries of the universe better than giant telescopes near Earth
  22. You know how to identify phishing emails – a cybersecurity researcher explains how to trust your instincts to foil the attacks
  23. Cliches may grate like nails on a chalkboard, but one person's cliche is another's sliced bread
  24. When and how was walking invented?
  25. What the 'spiritual but not religious' have in common with radical Protestants of 500 years ago
  26. How AI is hijacking art history
  27. How to meet America’s climate goals: 5 policies for Biden’s next climate bill
  28. The FDA authorizes Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine for children ages 5 to 11 – a pediatrician explains how the drug was tested for safety and efficacy
  29. Why taxing US billionaires’ wealth – as Biden tried to do – will never work
  30. A Catholic theologian argues for a death row inmate's right to have the pastor's touch in the execution chamber
  31. Less than 2% of all US giving supports women's and girls' charities
  32. Breast cancer awareness campaigns can do a better job supporting women who've received a stage 4 diagnosis, instead of focusing only on early detection and 'beating cancer'
  33. How to help kids with 'long COVID' thrive in school
  34. Antibiotic resistance is at a crisis point – government support for academia and Big Pharma to find new drugs could help defeat superbugs
  35. Steve Bannon is held in criminal contempt of Congress, pushing key question over presidential power to the courts
  36. How much longer will major league baseball stay in the closet?
  37. 10 tips to prevent or escape a house fire
  38. 10 fire safety tips to help keep you and your kids alive and safe
  39. Nearly half of all churches and other faith institutions help people get enough to eat
  40. New research suggests cat and dog 'moms' and 'dads' really are parenting their pets – here's the evolutionary explanation why
  41. State spending on anti-poverty programs could substantially reduce child abuse and neglect
  42. What's a 'miracle'? Here's how the Catholic Church decides
  43. The erosion of Roe v. Wade and abortion access didn't begin in Texas or Mississippi – it started in Pennsylvania in 1992
  44. What Big Oil knew about climate change, in its own words
  45. How commercialization over the centuries transformed the Day of the Dead
  46. College cost calculators aren't precise, but they could easily be made better
  47. In Biden's visit with the pope, a page from Reagan's playbook?
  48. Climate change is muting fall colors, but it's just the latest way that humans have altered US forests
  49. Why student absences aren't the real problem in America's 'attendance crisis'
  50. A quick guide to climate change jargon – what experts mean by mitigation, carbon neutral and 6 other key terms