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4 reasons Americans are still seeing empty shelves and long waits – with Christmas just around the corner

  • Written by Kevin Ketels, Lecturer, Global Supply Chain Management, Wayne State University
imageConsumers are still finding bare store shelves.AP Photo/David Zalubowski

Walk into any U.S. store these days and you’re likely to see empty shelves.

Shortages of virtually every type of product – from toilet paper and sneakers to pickup trucks and chicken – are showing up across the country. Looking for a book, bicycle, baby crib...

Read more: 4 reasons Americans are still seeing empty shelves and long waits – with Christmas just around the...

How the climate crisis is transforming the meaning of ‘sustainability’ in business

  • Written by Raz Godelnik, Assistant Professor of Strategic Design & Management, The New School
imageBusinesses tend to value profit over people and planet. Climate change is forcing them to evolve.elenabs via Getty Images

In his 2021 letter to CEOs, Larry Fink, the CEO and chairman of BlackRock, the world’s largest investment manager, wrote: “No issue ranks higher than climate change on our clients’ lists of priorities.”

His...

Read more: How the climate crisis is transforming the meaning of ‘sustainability’ in business

Rural Alaska has a bridge problem as permafrost thaws and crossing river ice gets riskier with climate change

  • Written by Guangqing Chi, Professor of Rural Sociology and Demography, Penn State
imageThe Denali Highway as it crosses the Susitna River.Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

America’s bridges are in rough shape. Of the nearly 620,000 bridges over roads, rivers and other waterways across the U.S., more than 43,500 of them, about 7%, are considered “structurally deficient.”

In Alaska,...

Read more: Rural Alaska has a bridge problem as permafrost thaws and crossing river ice gets riskier with...

Reporting all biosafety errors could improve labs worldwide – and increase public trust in biological research

  • Written by David Gillum, Executive Director of Environmental Health and Safety and Chief Safety Officer, Arizona State University
imageSome institutions publish information about their mishaps, while others do not.Peter Kneffel/picture alliance via Getty Images

The origin of SARS-CoV-2 remains a mystery. One theory is that the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 was transmitted from animals to humans – a fairly common occurrence. Another is that it came from a laboratory...

Read more: Reporting all biosafety errors could improve labs worldwide – and increase public trust in...

Computer Space launched the video game industry 50 years ago – here's the real reason you probably haven't heard of it

  • Written by Noah Wardrip-Fruin, Professor of Computational Media, University of California, Santa Cruz
imageComputer Space was innovative, but how was it to play?Ed Fries, CC BY-ND

Before Pong there was Computer Space, the first commercial video game. The progenitor of today’s US$175 billion industry debuted on Oct. 15, 1971, at the Music Operators of America trade show in Chicago. Housed in a futuristic-looking cabinet, Computer Space took its...

Read more: Computer Space launched the video game industry 50 years ago – here's the real reason you probably...

Cómo la mayor organización islámica del mundo impulsa la reforma religiosa en Indonesia e intenta influir en el mundo musulmán

  • Written by Ahmet T. Kuru, Porteous Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University
imageUna reunión durante el 73 aniversario de Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), en Yakarta, Indonesia en 2019.Eko Siswono Toyudho/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

Tras su regreso al poder en Afganistán, de nuevo los talibanes están imponiendo su ideología religiosa, con restricciones a los derechos de las mujeres y otras medidas represivas....

Read more: Cómo la mayor organización islámica del mundo impulsa la reforma religiosa en Indonesia e intenta...

Afghan women have a long history of taking leadership and fighting for their rights

  • Written by Wazhmah Osman, Assistant Professor of Media Studies and Production, Temple University
imageAfghan women hold 'silent' protests in Kabul against repressive measures under the Taliban regimeBilal Guler/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images

Ever since the Taliban recaptured Afghanistan, the question in much of the Western media has been, “What will happen to the women of Afghanistan?”

Indeed, this is an important concern that merits...

Read more: Afghan women have a long history of taking leadership and fighting for their rights

If you want to support the health and wellness of kids, stop focusing on their weight

  • Written by Nichole Kelly, Evergreen Associate Professor of Counseling Psychology and Prevention Science, University of Oregon
imagePhysical activity, eating habits and emotional support from friends and family are stronger predictors of health than body mass index.Keith Bedford/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Since the pandemic started, people of all ages have gained weight. At the same time, the rate at which youth and young adults are seeking treatment for eating...

Read more: If you want to support the health and wellness of kids, stop focusing on their weight

Sexual abuse survivors are voting on the Boy Scouts bankruptcy settlement: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Pamela Foohey, Professor of Law, Cardozo Law School, Yeshiva University
imageThousands of men say they were sexually abused as children taking part in the Boy Scouts.AP Photo/LM Otero

The Boy Scouts’ bankruptcy casecrossed an important milestone on Sept. 29, 2021, when Judge Laura Selber Silverstein approved the Boy Scouts’ statement that explains its plan to exit bankruptcy. That statement includes a proposal...

Read more: Sexual abuse survivors are voting on the Boy Scouts bankruptcy settlement: 5 questions answered

How your emotional response to the COVID-19 pandemic changed your behavior and your sense of time

  • Written by Philip Gable, Associate Professor of Psychology, University of Delaware
imageIf you had faith in the development of effective treatments, time tended to pass quickly.tolgart/Getty Images

The COVID-19 pandemic, now in its 19th month, has meant different things to different people. For some, it’s meant stress over new school and work regimes, or anxiety over the prospect of catching COVID-19 and dealing with the...

Read more: How your emotional response to the COVID-19 pandemic changed your behavior and your sense of time

More Articles ...

  1. If the US defaults on debt, expect the dollar to fall – and with it, Americans' standard of living
  2. How Columbus Day contributes to the cultural erasure of Italian Americans
  3. Nobel Peace Prize for journalists serves as reminder that freedom of the press is under threat from strongmen and social media
  4. WHO approved a malaria vaccine for children – a global health expert explains why that is a big deal
  5. Biden restores protection for national monuments Trump shrank: 5 essential reads
  6. Yes, the latest jobs data may look disappointing, but leisure and transportation sectors give reason for cheer
  7. 'Truth and Healing Commission' could help Native American communities traumatized by government-run boarding schools that tried to destroy Indian culture
  8. Flu season paired with COVID-19 presents the threat of a 'twindemic,' making the need for vaccination all the more urgent
  9. None of the 2021 science Nobel laureates are women – here's why men still dominate STEM award winning
  10. 4 tips for choosing a good college – and getting accepted
  11. Caring for the environment has a long Catholic lineage – hundreds of years before Pope Francis
  12. Perseverance’s first major successes on Mars – an update from mission scientists
  13. Land acknowledgments meant to honor Indigenous people too often do the opposite – erasing American Indians and sanitizing history instead
  14. The Catholic Church sex abuse crisis: 4 essential reads
  15. Facebook's own internal documents offer a blueprint for making social media safer for teens
  16. Teachers say working with students kept them motivated at the start of the pandemic
  17. Indigenous Peoples' Day: why it's replacing Columbus Day in many places
  18. Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen testified that the company's algorithms are dangerous – here's how they can manipulate you
  19. What's on the menu matters in health care for diverse patients
  20. The water you're drinking may be thousands of years old – growing demand for deeper wells is tapping ancient reserves
  21. Ancient groundwater: Why the water you're drinking may be thousands of years old
  22. What is chaos? A complex systems scientist explains
  23. My Ph.D. supervisor just won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry for designing a safer, cheaper and faster way to build molecules and make medicine
  24. First major Second Amendment case before the Supreme Court in over a decade could topple gun restrictions
  25. Facebook's scandals and outage test users' frenemy relationship
  26. Is social distancing unraveling the bonds that keep society together?
  27. Becoming a parent through surrogacy can have ethical challenges – but it is a positive experience for some
  28. As American independence rang, a sweeping lockdown and mass inoculations fought off a smallpox outbreak
  29. 4 trends in public school enrollment due to COVID-19
  30. Winners of 2021 Nobel Prize in Physics built mathematics of climate modeling, making predictions of global warming and modern weather forecasting possible
  31. The 2021 Nobel Prize for medicine helps unravel mysteries about how the body senses temperature and pressure
  32. What's in the Pandora Papers? And why does South Dakota feature so heavily?
  33. The Pandora Papers: why does South Dakota feature so heavily?
  34. Why improvisation is the future in an AI-dominated world
  35. How Theranos' faulty blood tests got to market – and what that shows about gaps in FDA regulation
  36. Century-old racist US Supreme Court cases still rule over millions of Americans
  37. California's latest offshore oil spill could fuel pressure to end oil production statewide
  38. Police killings of civilians in the US have been undercounted by more than half in official statistics
  39. The brutal trade in enslaved people within the US has been largely whitewashed out of history
  40. Why prescription drugs can work differently for different people
  41. Dangerous urban heat exposure has tripled since the 1980s, with the poor most at risk
  42. In cities, dangerous heat exposure has tripled since the 1980s, with the poor most at risk
  43. Puerto Rico has a once-in-a-lifetime chance to build a clean energy grid – but FEMA plans to spend $9.4 billion on fossil fuel infrastructure instead
  44. Cherry-picking the Bible and using verses out of context isn't a practice confined to those opposed to vaccines – it has been done for centuries
  45. How did white students respond to school integration after Brown v. Board of Education?
  46. How education reforms can support teachers around the world instead of undermining them
  47. Five years after largest marine heatwave on record hit northern California coast, many warm–water species have stuck around
  48. Why some college sports are often out of reach for students from low-income families
  49. Tylenol could be risky for pregnant women – a new review of 25 years of research finds acetaminophen may contribute to ADHD and other developmental disorders in children
  50. Britney’s conservatorship is one example of how the legacy of eugenics in the US continues to affect the lives of disabled women