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Supreme Court ruling against class action lawsuits is a blow for workers – and #MeToo

  • Written by Michele Gilman, Venable Professor of Law, University of Baltimore

The Supreme Court on May 21 narrowly ruled that employees who sign arbitration agreements cannot band together to sue their employers for unpaid wages.

As a law professor who directs a clinical legal program that regularly represents low-wage workers, I believe this ruling essentially allows employers to hide workplace injustices while also...

Read more: Supreme Court ruling against class action lawsuits is a blow for workers – and #MeToo

Why California's new rooftop mandate isn't good enough for some solar power enthusiasts

  • Written by Garth Heutel, Associate Professor of Economics, Georgia State University
Solar panels being installed in new housing under construction in Sacramento, Calif. AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli

More California rooftops will soon sport solar panels, partly due to a new state mandate requiring them for all new houses and low-rise residential buildings by 2020.

This rule immediately sparked lively debates. Even experts who generally...

Read more: Why California's new rooftop mandate isn't good enough for some solar power enthusiasts

U.S. Forces in South Korea: A seven-decade commitment

  • Written by Frances Tilney Burke, PhD student, Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University

Why does the U.S. have troops in South Korea?

A groundbreaking diplomatic event — the planned summit on June 12 between North Korea’s Kim Jong Un and President Donald Trump — may be in jeopardy. The actions of U.S. troops in South Korea are at the center of that conflict.

North Korea’s official Central News Agency stated that...

Read more: U.S. Forces in South Korea: A seven-decade commitment

What you see in a 3D scan of yourself could be upsetting

  • Written by Jessica Ridgway Clayton, Assistant Professor of Retail Entrepreneurship, Florida State University
What does a machine see when it looks at you?Jessica Ridgway

Amazon is reportedly looking for people who are willing to have their bodies scanned in 3D in order to track and measure subtle changes in their sizes and shapes. It’s part of the company’s broader push to sell more clothes by more accurately predicting how garments will fit...

Read more: What you see in a 3D scan of yourself could be upsetting

A clinical trial wants your DNA – what should you do?

  • Written by Martin Schiller, Executive Director of the Nevada Institute of Personalized Medicine, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Reading over the consent form.megaflopp/shutterstock.com

On May 6, the “All of Us” study started enrolling participants. This national study will be one of the largest ever examining the connection between genetics, behavior and medical outcomes, with a goal of 1 million or more participants. Anyone over the age of 18 in the U.S. can...

Read more: A clinical trial wants your DNA – what should you do?

Ticks and mosquitoes bringing more diseases – what can we do?

  • Written by Joyce Sakamoto, Assistant Research Professor of Entomology, Pennsylvania State University
A female deer tick on a piece of straw. Steve Ellingson/Shutterstock.com

Cases of vector-borne disease have more than doubled in the U.S. since 2004, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recently reported, with mosquitoes and ticks bearing most of the blame.

Mosquitoes, long spreaders of malaria and yellow fever, have more recently spread...

Read more: Ticks and mosquitoes bringing more diseases – what can we do?

Improving school climate, not just security, is key to violence prevention

  • Written by F. Chris Curran, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
A student retrieves her belongings from Santa Fe High School in Santa Fe, Texas, where a gunman opened fire on May 18 and killed 10 people. David J. Phillip/AP

School shootings like the one that took place in Santa Fe, Texas, on May 18 are often followed by calls for enhanced security measures.

But Santa Fe High School already had many of these...

Read more: Improving school climate, not just security, is key to violence prevention

Jewish Americans changed their names, but not at Ellis Island

  • Written by Kirsten Fermaglich, Associate Professor, Michigan State University
Immigrants and inspectors in the registry room for legal inspections at Ellis Island.

A well-worn joke in American Jewish culture goes like this. A Jewish immigrant landed at Ellis Island in New York. The procedures were confusing, and he was overwhelmed by the commotion. When one of the officials asked him “What is your name?” he...

Read more: Jewish Americans changed their names, but not at Ellis Island

Toward sustainable ammonia production

  • Written by Xiaofeng Feng, Assistant Professor of Physics, University of Central Florida
Ammonia production is one of the most energy-intensive industrial processes on the planet.By saoirse2013/shutterstock.com

Ammonia, with its unmistakable urinous odor, is a critical ingredient in agricultural fertilizers. With more than 145 million tonnes manufactured annually, only sulfuric acid outranks it as the world’s most produced...

Read more: Toward sustainable ammonia production

DNA apps promise deeper insights for consumers – but at what cost?

  • Written by Sarah Catherine Nelson, Research Scientist in Biostatistics and PhD Candidate in Public Health Genetics, University of Washington
Users may want to know more than what’s in a basic report from a genetic testing company.science photo/Shutterstock.com

Last month, law enforcement in California apprehended the alleged Golden State Killer, a serial murderer and rapist who terrorized the state during the 70s and 80s. Investigators triangulated to a suspect using a combination...

Read more: DNA apps promise deeper insights for consumers – but at what cost?

More Articles ...

  1. A sustainable, energy-saving way to make the key ingredient in fertilizers
  2. Why China can't meet Trump's $200 billion trade demand
  3. 5 things to know about mass shootings in America
  4. Scott Pruitt's approach to pollution control will make the air dirtier and Americans less healthy
  5. I teach refugees to map their world
  6. How lessons from childhood cancer care could improve adult cancer care
  7. The GOP's poor arguments for doubling down on SNAP's work requirements
  8. Privatizing essential human services like the VA can come at a high social cost
  9. 70 years of instant photos, thanks to inventor Edwin Land's Polaroid camera
  10. Wildfire risks are high again this year – here's what travelers need to know
  11. Why the EPA's 'secret science' proposal alarms public health experts
  12. Venezuelans are boycotting their presidential election
  13. Diet soda may be hurting your diet
  14. What is 5G? The next generation of wireless, explained
  15. Why America needs a new approach to school desegregation
  16. A peek into the lives of Puerto Rican Muslims and what Ramadan means post Hurricane Maria
  17. Donald Glover and the state of 'black genius'
  18. The Iran nuclear deal could still be saved, experts say
  19. In the US, fairy-tale royal weddings clash with reality
  20. Yanny or Laurel? It's your brain not your ears that decides
  21. Tom Wolfe elevated journalism into enduring literature
  22. Brazilian candidate still crushing his rivals from jail
  23. The orgasm gap: Picking up where the sexual revolution left off
  24. Supreme Court delivers a home run for sports bettors – and now states need to scramble
  25. Should I kill spiders in my home? An entomologist explains why not to
  26. What is doxxing, and why is it so scary?
  27. War on fake news could be won with the help of behavioral science
  28. What are halal foods?
  29. US and Europe face an 'increasingly loveless marriage' after Trump's Iran deal withdrawal
  30. Some tropical frogs may be developing resistance to a deadly fungal disease – but now salamanders are at risk
  31. Studying poop samples, scientists find clues on health and disease
  32. Tax law's 'opportunity zones' won't create opportunities for the people who need it most
  33. US embassy in Jerusalem opens amid violence: 4 essential reads
  34. How understanding pain could curb opioid addiction
  35. Is bigger really better?
  36. Gender is personal – not computational
  37. Maria Agnesi, the greatest female mathematician you've never heard of
  38. Bangladeshi rappers wield rhymes as a weapon, with Tupac as their guide
  39. Trump proposal to weaken project reviews threatens the 'Magna Carta of environmental law'
  40. Why the offshore wind industry is about to take off
  41. What can we learn from the way graduates are decorating their caps?
  42. How weakened US fossil fuel regulations threaten environmental justice in Colorado
  43. Rethinking reporting on polls in time for midterm elections
  44. The next big discovery in astronomy? Scientists probably found it years ago – but they don't know it yet
  45. Recreational ancestry DNA testing may reveal more than consumers bargained for
  46. Why bullshit hurts democracy more than lies
  47. Women on the 2018 ballot are busting perceptions of motherhood and leadership
  48. Smart windows could combine solar panels and TVs too
  49. Americans are more anxious than before
  50. Science teachers sacrifice to provide lab materials for students