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How flu changes within the human body may hint at future global trends

  • Written by Katherine Xue, Doctoral Student in Genome Sciences, University of Washington
imageWhat can a single person's flu infection tell you about how the virus changes around the world?Xue and Bloom, CC BY-SA

Evolution is usually very slow, a process of change that takes thousands or millions of years to see.

But for influenza, evolution is fast – and deadly. Flu viruses change rapidly to escape the body’s defenses. Every few...

Read more: How flu changes within the human body may hint at future global trends

Is Nancy Pelosi worth the trouble?

  • Written by Kathryn L. Pearson, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Minnesota
imageA recent poll found Nancy Pelosi's favorability at 39 percent – about on par with Trump'sREUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Democrats in Congress are struggling to keep up a unified front.

As the minority party, Democrats have spent the past six months standing by, mostly powerless, as President Donald Trump has made haphazard progresstoward dismantling many...

Read more: Is Nancy Pelosi worth the trouble?

GOP health care bill would make rural America's distress much worse

  • Written by Claire Snell-Rood, Assistant Professor of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley
imageRural hospitals, such as this one in Wedowee, Alabama, are struggling to stay open. AP Photo/Brynn Anderson

Much has been made of the distress and discontent in rural areas during the 2016 U.S. presidential election. Few realize, however, this is also felt through unequal health.

Researchers call it the “ruralmortalitypenalty.” While...

Read more: GOP health care bill would make rural America's distress much worse

Elite public schools that rely on entry exams fail the diversity test

  • Written by Jake Murray, Faculty Director for Professional Education, BU School of Education, Boston University
imageStuyvesant High School students arrive on the first day in 2015.AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

The jewels in many an urban school district’s crown are their exam schools, competitive public schools that base enrollment on test scores. With a school like New York’s Stuyvesant, Boston Latin or Walter Payton (in Chicago) on their transcript,...

Read more: Elite public schools that rely on entry exams fail the diversity test

Urban nature: What kinds of plants and wildlife flourish in cities?

  • Written by Christopher Swan, Professor of Geography and Environmental Systems, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageThe High Line in New York City, a former elevated railroad trestle converted to a public park.Shinya Suzuki/Flickr, CC BY-ND

Biodiversity refers to the variety of all living things on Earth, but people often have very specific ideas of what it means. If you run an online search for images of biodiversity, you are likely to find lots of photos of...

Read more: Urban nature: What kinds of plants and wildlife flourish in cities?

What Jeff Bezos gets wrong (and right) with his populist philanthropy

  • Written by Ted Lechterman, Postdoctoral Fellow, Stanford University McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society

Jeff Bezos, the world’s second-richest person, trails his peers when it comes to generosity. His family’s donations to hospitals, museums and universities rarely make headlines, and he hasn’t signed the Giving Pledge, a commitment by many of the world’s richest people to give away most of their wealth.

So when the Amazon...

Read more: What Jeff Bezos gets wrong (and right) with his populist philanthropy

Is Putin's Russia the critical threat Americans believe it to be?

  • Written by Ronald Suny, Professor of History and Political Science, University of Michigan
imageRussian President Vladimir Putin attends a wreath-laying ceremony at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Moscow.AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin

U.S. intelligence agencies – 17 of them – agree that evidence shows the Russian government hacked the Democratic National Committee and waged a campaign to influence voters in 2016.

Although no evidence...

Read more: Is Putin's Russia the critical threat Americans believe it to be?

The iPhone turns 10 – and it's isolated us, not united us

  • Written by Jean Twenge, Professor of Psychology, San Diego State University
imageIt was supposed to bring us all together.Rokas Tenys/Shutterstock.com

Sometime around 2011 or 2012, it suddenly became very easy to predict what people would be doing in public places: Most would be looking down at their phones.

For years, mobile phones weren’t much to look at. The screens were small, and users needed to press the same key...

Read more: The iPhone turns 10 – and it's isolated us, not united us

Could a tragedy like the Grenfell Tower fire happen in the U.S.?

  • Written by Brian Meacham, Associate Professor of Fire Protection Engineering, Worcester Polytechnic Institute
imageAP Photo/Matt Dunham

The Grenfell Tower fire in London has triggered questions about how the tragedy could have happened, whether it could happen elsewhere, and what might be learned from it to prevent future disasters. As a professor of fire protection engineering, I know that the answers are not simple, and the fixes not quick.

Investigations into...

Read more: Could a tragedy like the Grenfell Tower fire happen in the U.S.?

Why a 'cashless' society would hurt the poor: A lesson from India

  • Written by Dana Kornberg, Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology, University of Michigan
imageA bank official counts discontinued rupee notes. AP Photo/ Anupam Nath

India recently tried to reduce the use of cash in its economy by eliminating, overnight, two of its most widely used bills in what was called demonetization.

While the effort – initially explained as an attempt to curb “black money” – has been a failure in...

Read more: Why a 'cashless' society would hurt the poor: A lesson from India

More Articles ...

  1. The Trump team's poor arguments for slashing SNAP
  2. Textbooks in the digital world
  3. Cash is falling out of fashion – will it disappear forever?
  4. Women in horror: Victims no more
  5. A pair of decades-old policies may change the way rural America gets local news
  6. What do protests about Harry Potter books teach us?
  7. The Supreme Court takes on gerrymandering: 6 essential reads
  8. 30 years after Edwards v. Aguillard: Why creationism lingers in public schools
  9. On Eid 2017, a peek into the lives of Puerto Rican Muslims
  10. What happens when the federal government eliminates health coverage? Lessons from the past
  11. People keep voting in support of the death penalty. So how can we end it?
  12. Energy wonks have a meltdown over the US going 100 percent renewable. Why?
  13. African-American Music Appreciation Month: 5 essential reads
  14. What happens if Trump's White House invokes executive privilege?
  15. Employment helps white men’s health more than women and blacks
  16. How to make sense of the Senate health care bill: 4 essential reads
  17. Forget the insight of a lone genius – innovation is an evolving process of trial and error
  18. From gay Nazis to 'we're here, we're queer': A century of arguing about gay pride
  19. Are LGBT Americans actually reaping the benefits of marriage?
  20. Teaching machines to understand – and summarize – text
  21. Drew Faust and old, white men: The changing role of university presidents
  22. Why the latest wave of terrorism will get worse before it gets better
  23. Why cash remains sacred in American churches
  24. Even ugly animals can win hearts and dollars to save them from extinction
  25. Government action isn't enough for climate change. The private sector can cut billions of tons of carbon
  26. Marine Le Pen didn't win over women. Can anyone on the far right?
  27. Can yoga be Christian?
  28. What happened to the openly gay athlete?
  29. Challenging the status quo in mathematics: Teaching for understanding
  30. Reverse engineering mysterious 500-million-year-old fossils that confound our tree of life
  31. ATMs dispense more than money: The dirt and dope that's on your cash
  32. Most expensive race in House history turns out nearly 58 percent of Georgia district's voters
  33. Fixing a toxic culture like Uber's requires more than just a new CEO
  34. Why there are costs to moral outrage
  35. Will guilty verdict in teen texting suicide case lead to new laws on end-of-life issues?
  36. How secure are today's ATMs? 5 questions answered
  37. When – and why – did people first start using money?
  38. Amazon dives into groceries with Whole Foods: Five questions answered
  39. Julius Caesar in our times
  40. American slavery: Separating fact from myth
  41. How US gun control compares to the rest of the world
  42. Even though genetic information is available, doctors may be ignoring important clinical clues
  43. Do happy faces or sad faces raise more money?
  44. Does hookup culture differ on Catholic campuses?
  45. Once at the vanguard of national policy, California plays defense under Trump
  46. Trump nods to Cuban exiles, rolls back ties: Experts react
  47. Is lead in the US food supply decreasing our IQ?
  48. Can tiny Qatar keep defying its powerful neighbors? It may be up to Washington
  49. How a journalism class is teaching middle schoolers to fight fake news
  50. The Fresh Air Fund's complicated racial record