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The best shot at overcoming vaccination standoffs? Having doctors listen to – not shun – reluctant parents

  • Written by Mary Politi, Associate Professor of Surgery, Division of Public Health Sciences, Washington University in St Louis
imageA recent study of medical students and residents found they were reluctant to engage with parents who have vaccination fears. But listening to parents is important. Olena Yakobchuck/Shutterstock.com

Vaccines save between two and three million lives per year by protecting individuals from diseases such as measles, mumps, diphtheria, pertussis,...

Read more: The best shot at overcoming vaccination standoffs? Having doctors listen to – not shun – reluctant...

UAW's loss at Nissan auto plant masks genuine progress for organized labor

  • Written by Harley Shaiken, Director of the Center for Latin American Studies and Professor of Letters and Science, University of California, Berkeley
imageThe 5,000-strong pro-union march in March suggested labor support in Canton is growing.AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

A spirited, decade-long effort by workers to organize a union at the sprawling Nissan assembly plant in Canton, Mississippi, seemed to drive into a ditch on August 5, when officials finally tallied the election ballots.

The margin looked...

Read more: UAW's loss at Nissan auto plant masks genuine progress for organized labor

Here's a better vision for the US-Mexico border: Make the Rio Grande grand again

  • Written by Gabriel Diaz Montemayor, Assistant Professor of Landscape Architecture, University of Texas at Austin
imageIn Big Bend National Park's Santa Elena Canyon, the Rio Grande separates the United States (left) from Mexico (right).Ken Lund, CC BY-SA

The United States and Mexico have shared their current international border for nearly 170 years. Today they cooperate at multiple levels on issues that affect the border region, although you would not know it...

Read more: Here's a better vision for the US-Mexico border: Make the Rio Grande grand again

Afghanistan is now officially James Mattis’ war

  • Written by Simon Reich, Professor in The Division of Global Affairs and The Department of Political Science, Rutgers University Newark
imageHow will U.S. Defense Secretary James Mattis handle America's "Forever War'?Jonathan Ernst/Pool Photo via AP

Donald Trump’s speech on his administration’s strategy in Afghanistan – in which he announced the introduction of an unspecified number of new combat troops, without a mission and without a specified end date, in a strategy...

Read more: Afghanistan is now officially James Mattis’ war

For many in Puerto Rico, 'energy dominance' is just a new name for US colonialism

  • Written by Catalina M. de Onís, Assistant Professor of Civic Communication and Media, Willamette University
imageThis 1899 drawing depicts Uncle Sam disciplining his newly acquired pupils/possessions, including Puerto Rico, following the Treaty of Paris. Library of Congress

The Trump administration has made “achieving American energy dominance” a central policy goal. President Trump asserts that “energy dominance” requires expanding...

Read more: For many in Puerto Rico, 'energy dominance' is just a new name for US colonialism

Can corporate America afford to walk away from President Trump?

  • Written by Neal Hartman, Senior Lecturer in Managerial Communication, MIT Sloan School of Management
imageMerck CEO Ken Frazier, seated next to Trump, was first to resign from his manufacturing council. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

After campaigning as the candidate best able to work with business, President Donald Trump has shown he is anything but.

A stream of resignations from high-level business counsels hit a crescendo recently when Trump was forced to...

Read more: Can corporate America afford to walk away from President Trump?

Will CRISPR fears fade with familiarity?

  • Written by Patricia Stapleton, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
imageWith all these 'test-tube babies' grown up, how have our reactions to the technology evolved?AP Photo/Alastair Grant

The first “test-tube baby” made headlines around the world in 1978, setting off intense debate on the ethics of researching human embryos and reproductive technologies. Every breakthrough since then has raised the same...

Read more: Will CRISPR fears fade with familiarity?

African-Americans fighting fascism and racism, from WWII to Charlottesville

  • Written by Matthew Delmont, Director and Professor of the School of Historical, Philosophical & Religious Studies, Arizona State University
imageTuskegee Airmen and P-47.San Diego Air & Space Museum Archives

In July 1943, one month after a race riot shook Detroit, Vice President Henry Wallace spoke to a crowd of union workers and civic groups:

“We cannot fight to crush Nazi brutality abroad and condone race riots at home. Those who fan the fires of racial clashes for the purpose...

Read more: African-Americans fighting fascism and racism, from WWII to Charlottesville

Some nerves: How loud noise may change hearing

  • Written by Matthew Xu-Friedman, Associate Professor of Biology, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
imageHearing can be affected by loud noises, but the mechanisms have not been fully understood. The auditory nerve plays a big role.9nang/Shutterstock.com

Our modern world is loud. Just sitting in a car, or an airplane, or watching movie previews, we are bombarded with sound. Even when those noises aren’t damaging to the sensitive microphone that...

Read more: Some nerves: How loud noise may change hearing

How should we protest neo-Nazis? Lessons from German history

  • Written by Laurie Marhoefer, Assistant Professor of History, University of Washington
imageA supporter of President Donald Trump, center, argues with a counterprotester at a rally in Boston on Saturday, Aug. 19, 2017.AP Photo/Michael Dwyer

After the murder of Heather Heyer in Charlottesville, many people are asking themselves what they should do if Nazis rally in their city. Should they put their bodies on the line in...

Read more: How should we protest neo-Nazis? Lessons from German history

More Articles ...

  1. How the smartphone affected an entire generation of kids
  2. Can low doses of chemicals affect your health? A new report weighs the evidence
  3. Colleges need affirmative action – but it can be expanded
  4. Devil versus angel: When do they shift into action in the face of temptation?
  5. Google memo completely misses how implicit biases harm women
  6. Why lowering nicotine in cigarettes could change the course of health
  7. Warning signs of mass violence – in the US?
  8. Over the years, Americans have become increasingly exposed to extremism
  9. Are Islamic State recruits more street gang members than zealots?
  10. How religion motivates people to give and serve
  11. The Confederate statue debate: 3 essential reads
  12. Harvard study strengthens link between breast cancer risk and light exposure at night
  13. More states are allowing guns on college campuses
  14. Making driverless cars safe for people on foot
  15. Explaining polygamy and its history in the Mormon Church
  16. Curbing climate change: Why it's so hard to act in time
  17. Is Ryan Kelly's iconic photograph an American 'Guernica'?
  18. Charlottesville and the politics of fear
  19. How ancient cultures explained eclipses
  20. Why tourists go to sites associated with death and suffering
  21. Why state-level single-payer health care efforts are doomed
  22. Trump's rejection of national climate report would do more damage than exiting the Paris Agreement
  23. FirstNet for emergency communications: 6 questions answered
  24. How union stakes in ailing papers like the Chicago Sun-Times may keep them alive
  25. How much longer will Maduro's grip on power last? Look to the military
  26. How subversive artists made thrift shopping cool
  27. Disarming North Korea means making concessions
  28. How a British royal's monumental errors made India's partition more painful
  29. Are you lonesome tonight? Why we, like Elvis, turn to food for comfort
  30. Tracing the sources of today's Russian cyberthreat
  31. How parents can help their freshman teens cope with stress
  32. Trump's threat to withdraw from NAFTA may hit a hurdle: The US Constitution
  33. Bait and switch: Anchovies eat plastic because it smells like prey
  34. Does biology explain why men outnumber women in tech?
  35. Lest we forget: Children are watching this racism, violence and our reactions
  36. The hidden stories of medical experimentation on Caribbean slave plantations
  37. The legal threat to diversity on campus
  38. Are men seen as 'more American' than women?
  39. Why the US shouldn't start a trade war with China
  40. Total eclipse, partial failure: Scientific expeditions don't always go as planned
  41. The road to India's partition
  42. End-to-end encryption isn't enough security for 'real people'
  43. Red team-blue team? Debating climate science should not be a cage match
  44. How safe is chicken imported from China? 5 questions answered
  45. Voyager Golden Records 40 years later: Real audience was always here on Earth
  46. Why social smoking can be just as bad for you as daily smoking
  47. Why didn't sanctions stop North Korea’s missile program?
  48. Bullying and suicide: What's the connection?
  49. Betsy DeVos' 6-month report card: More undoing than doing
  50. What to do with Confederate statues?