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The history of the persecution of Myanmar's Rohingya

  • Written by Engy Abdelkader, Rutgers University

Some 420,000 Rohingya Muslims, a religious and ethnic minority community in Myanmar, have fled to neighboring Bangladesh since August this year.

The United Nations has called the Rohingya the world’s most persecuted minority group and described the atrocities by Myanmar’s authorities as “ethnic cleansing,” whereby one group...

Read more: The history of the persecution of Myanmar's Rohingya

Chasing the flame: Does media coverage of wildfires probe deeply enough?

  • Written by Adrianne Kroepsch, Assistant Professor, Division of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences, Colorado School of Mines
imageTrees burn in the High Park wildfire near Fort Collins, Colorado, June 17, 2012.USFS, CC BY

It is the dry season in western states, which means that large swaths of land are burning or smoldering and are likely to remain that way until the snows arrive. The 2017 wildfire year started earlier and has scorched more acreage than normal. It is also far...

Read more: Chasing the flame: Does media coverage of wildfires probe deeply enough?

How Trump could undermine the US solar boom

  • Written by Llewelyn Hughes, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Australian National University

Tumbling prices for solar energy have helped stoke demand among U.S. homeowners, businesses and utilities for electricity powered by the sun. But that could soon change.

President Donald Trump – whose proposed 2018 budget would slash support for alternative energy – may get a new opportunity to undermine the solar power market by...

Read more: How Trump could undermine the US solar boom

Study: More, and more diverse, US college students voted in 2016

  • Written by Nancy Thomas, Director of the Institute for Democracy & Higher Education, Tufts University
imageAP

Whether motivated by support for particular policies or enthusiasm – or ire – toward the candidates, the 2016 election captured the attention of U.S. college and university students nationwide.

That’s the finding of a new study of students at more than 1,000 U.S. institutions released by the Institute for Democracy and Higher...

Read more: Study: More, and more diverse, US college students voted in 2016

Comics captured America's growing ambivalence about the Vietnam War

  • Written by Cathy Schlund-Vials, Professor of English and Asian American Studies, University of Connecticut
imageA Panel from the Marvel Comics series 'The 'Nam.'Marvel Comics

In America’s imagination, the Vietnam War is not so much celebrated as it is assiduously contemplated. This inward-looking approach is reflected in films like “The Deer Hunter” and “Apocalypse Now,” best-selling novels and popular memoirs that dwell on the...

Read more: Comics captured America's growing ambivalence about the Vietnam War

'Medicare for all' could be cheaper than you think

  • Written by Gerald Friedman, Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst
imageSome of the original advocates for Medicare in the 1960s hoped to eventually extend it to everyone.AP Photo

Public support for single-payer health care has been rising in recent months amid failed Republican efforts to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

That’s perhaps why Sen. Bernie Sanders on September 13 introduced a new version of...

Read more: 'Medicare for all' could be cheaper than you think

The South Vietnamese who fled the fall of Saigon -- and those who returned

  • Written by Jana Lipman, Associate Professor of History, Tulane University
imageVietnamese at a camp in Guam seeking repatriation, September 1975.National Archives and Records Administration, Record Group 319, Box 19, declassification number 984082, CC BY

More than 120,000 people fled Vietnam after the North Vietnamese captured Saigon on April 30, 1975.

This chaotic evacuation has been captured in iconic photos, documentary...

Read more: The South Vietnamese who fled the fall of Saigon -- and those who returned

Why it's offensive to offer a lamb dinner to the Hindu god Ganesha

  • Written by Jeffery D. Long, Professor of Religion and Asian Studies, Elizabethtown College
imageThe Hindu god Ganesha.Anant Nath Sharma, CC BY-NC-ND

A recent ad from the meat industry in Australia, seeking to promote lamb as a food that people from a wide range of religious backgrounds can consume, has given offenseto many Hindus in Australia and internationally.

In Australia, the ad prompted a complaint by the High Commission of India. In the...

Read more: Why it's offensive to offer a lamb dinner to the Hindu god Ganesha

Saving amphibians from a deadly fungus means acting without knowing all the answers

  • Written by Brittany A. Mosher, Postdoctoral Researcher, Colorado State University
imageA male boreal toad waits for opportunities to mate near a Colorado mountain lake. Brittany Mosher, CC BY-ND

The calls of frogs on warm nights in the spring are a welcome sound, telling listeners that the seasons are changing and summer is coming. Today, however, ponds that once echoed with the chirps, chuckles and calls of frogs and toads are...

Read more: Saving amphibians from a deadly fungus means acting without knowing all the answers

How the latest effort to repeal Obamacare would affect millions

  • Written by Simon Haeder, Assistant Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
imageFrom left, Sen. Dean Heller, R-Nev., Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., and Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., hold a press conference on Capitol Hill in Washington, Wednesday, Sept. 13, 2017. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

At the end of July, the nation held its collective breath as Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) looked poised...

Read more: How the latest effort to repeal Obamacare would affect millions

More Articles ...

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  2. Science communicators must consider short-term objectives while keeping their eyes on the prize
  3. Trump speaks at the UN: 5 takeaways
  4. Some of the best parts of autonomous vehicles are already here
  5. The most important ways parents can prepare children for school
  6. Why today's teens aren't in any hurry to grow up
  7. As a warming climate changes Kodiak bears' diets, impacts could ripple through ecosystems
  8. Languages don't all have the same number of terms for colors – scientists have a new theory why
  9. Rich American seniors are getting healthier, leaving the poor behind
  10. Scientists are unraveling the mystery of your body's clock – and soon may be able to reset it
  11. Why Hurricanes Harvey and Irma won't lead to action on climate change
  12. How the government can steal your stuff: 6 questions about civil asset forfeiture answered
  13. RAISE Act: Global panel of scholars explains 'merit-based' immigration
  14. The enduring power of Mosul's rich and diverse past
  15. How the Pentagon tried to cure America of its 'Vietnam syndrome'
  16. Can taking down websites really stop terrorists and hate groups?
  17. Using truly secure passwords: 6 essential reads
  18. Rebuilding after disasters: 5 essential reads
  19. Harvey and Irma present nearly perfect conditions for Zika-spreading mosquitoes
  20. How affirmative action could cure cancer and heart disease
  21. How 'dreamers' and green card lottery winners strengthen the US economy
  22. Roots of racism: 6 essential reads
  23. Seeds in space – how well can they survive harsh, non-Earth conditions?
  24. 'Jesus People' – a movement born from the 'Summer of Love'
  25. Hurricanes drive immigration to the US
  26. How solar power can protect the US military from threats to the electric grid
  27. Vietnam: Who was right about what went wrong – and why it matters in Afghanistan
  28. How Vietnam dramatically changed our views on soldiers, honor and war
  29. Even when it's sitting in storage, coal threatens human health
  30. How Vietnam dramatically changed our views on honor and war
  31. Vietnam War: Who was right about what went wrong – and why it matters in Afghanistan
  32. During Vietnam, music spoke to both sides of a divided nation
  33. Can 'Game of Thrones' teach us about the meaning of life?
  34. During Vietnam War, music spoke to both sides of a divided nation
  35. Paris and Los Angeles bids to host Olympics expose deeper crisis at Olympic Games
  36. Irma price gouging highlights sad truth: Consumer fleecing is the new normal
  37. 5 things that have changed about FEMA since Katrina – and 5 that haven't
  38. Sleepy teenage brains need school to start later in the morning
  39. 5 ways to stretch your disaster relief dollars
  40. Should the US put power lines underground?
  41. Do hurricanes feel the effects of climate change?
  42. Want to fix America's health care? First, focus on food
  43. Is the new iPhone designed for cybersafety?
  44. How colleges can help students keep out of academic trouble
  45. American generosity after disasters: 4 questions answered
  46. What do hospitals do in a hurricane? Use their own emergency plans
  47. These four easy steps can make you a math whiz
  48. Are cryptocurrencies a dream come true for cyber-extortionists?
  49. Evolutionary geneticists spot natural selection happening now in people
  50. The mental health impact of major disasters like Harvey and Irma