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Should journalism become less professional?

  • Written by Robert Trumpbour, Associate Professor of Communications, Pennsylvania State University
imageDemocratic presidential hopeful Bill Clinton has a cup of coffee with newspaper columnist Jimmy Breslin in April 1992. Breslin died on March 19.Stephan Savoia/AP Photo

When I heard the news of longtime New York Daily News columnist Jimmy Breslin’s death, it felt personal.

I was born in Queens and read Breslin as a youngster. My mom and dad...

Read more: Should journalism become less professional?

Gut check: Researchers develop measures to capture moral judgments and empathy

  • Written by C. Daryl Cameron, Assistant Professor of Psychology and Research Associate in the Rock Ethics Institute, Pennsylvania State University
imageCan moral sentiments be measured?James Willamor, CC BY-SA

Imagine picking up the morning newspaper and feeling moral outrage at the latest action taken by the opposing political party. Or turning the page and seeing people around the world suffering famine and heartbreak, and flinching with empathy at their pain.

One of the most fundamental tasks we...

Read more: Gut check: Researchers develop measures to capture moral judgments and empathy

To really help US workers, we should invest in robots

  • Written by Nikolaus Correll, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, University of Colorado
imageUniversity students experiment with human-robot interaction and autonomous manipulation, two elements of manufacturing's future.Nikolaus Correll, CC BY-ND

America’s manufacturing heyday is gone, and so are millions of jobs, lost to modernization. Despite what Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin might think, the National Bureau of Economic...

Read more: To really help US workers, we should invest in robots

Why Russia gave up Alaska, America's gateway to the Arctic

  • Written by William L. Iggiagruk Hensley, Visiting Distinguished Professor, University of Alaska Anchorage

One hundred and fifty years ago, on March 30, 1867, U.S. Secretary of State William H. Seward and Russian envoy Baron Edouard de Stoeckl signed the Treaty of Cession. With a stroke of a pen, Tsar Alexander II had ceded Alaska, his country’s last remaining foothold in North America, to the United States for US$7.2 million.

That sum, amounting...

Read more: Why Russia gave up Alaska, America's gateway to the Arctic

Does it pay to get a double major in college?

  • Written by Christos Makridis, Ph.D. Candidate in Labor and Public Economics, Stanford University
imageWhether you have two majors or one, graduation is a celebration.Syda Productions/Shutterstock.com

Students are bombarded with an array of competing opportunities during college, all with the promise that each will lead to a better job or higher earnings upon entering the “real world.”

One such option is the double major, in which a...

Read more: Does it pay to get a double major in college?

What motivates moral outrage?

  • Written by Zachary K. Rothschild, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Bowdoin College

When 109 travelers entering the United States were detained by an executive order blocking citizens from seven Muslim majority countries, tens of thousands of Americans gathered all over the country to voice their anger. The policy had little to no direct effect on the protesters themselves.

Similarly, more than four decades after Roe v. Wade, the...

Read more: What motivates moral outrage?

The rise of anti-immigrant attitudes, violence and nationalism in Costa Rica

  • Written by Caitlin Fouratt, Professor of International Studies, California State University, Long Beach
imageWorkers wash freshly harvested bananas on a banana plantation near Parrita, Costa Rica.AP Photo/Kent Gilbert

Costa Rica is often thought of as the “Switzerland of the Americas.”

With a stable democracy and no standing army, the small Central American country of 4.8 million is often referred to as the “exception” to the...

Read more: The rise of anti-immigrant attitudes, violence and nationalism in Costa Rica

Trump slams brakes on Obama's climate plan, but there's still a long road ahead

  • Written by Henrik Selin, Associate Professor in the Frederick S Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University
imageTrump signed the executive order surrounded by coal miners, saying it was 'about jobs.'AP Photo/Matthew Brown

Badly looking for a political win that would both fulfill some campaign promises to his political base and satisfy the demands of rank-and-file Republicans in Congress, President Trump on March 28 signed an expansive Energy Independence and...

Read more: Trump slams brakes on Obama's climate plan, but there's still a long road ahead

Trump's energy and climate change order: Seven essential reads

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Editor, Environment and Energy, The Conversation
imagePresident Trump holds up the signed Energy Independence Executive Order, Tuesday, March 28, 2017, at EPA headquarters in Washington, surrounded by coal miners and members of his Cabinet.AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories.

On March 28 President Trump signed an executive order that...

Read more: Trump's energy and climate change order: Seven essential reads

Trump's FCC continues to redefine the public interest as business interests

  • Written by Christopher Ali, Assistant Professor, Department of Media Studies, University of Virginia

More Articles ...

  1. We’re suing the federal government to be free to do our research
  2. Climate politics: Environmentalists need to think globally, but act locally
  3. How Facebook – the Wal-Mart of the internet – dismantled online subcultures
  4. Educating children in Guatemala before they decide to migrate to the US border
  5. What history tells us about Boy Scouts and inclusion
  6. Did medical Darwinism doom the GOP health plan?
  7. Study: 60 percent of rural millennials lack access to a political life
  8. Better locker rooms: It's not just a transgender thing
  9. Momentum isn't magic – vindicating the hot hand with the mathematics of streaks
  10. How did celibacy become mandatory for priests?
  11. Restaurants pledged to make kids’ meals healthier – but the data show not much has changed
  12. Pay people to stop smoking? It works, especially in vulnerable groups
  13. Why threats to get votes for health law are more workplace bullying than political tactics
  14. Republicans fumble ACA repeal: Expert reaction
  15. Essential health benefits suddenly at center of health care debate, but what are they?
  16. America can't be first without Europe
  17. Dangers of the witch hunt in Washington
  18. Want to end TB? Diagnose and treat all forms of the disease
  19. What the Heaven's Gate suicides say about American culture
  20. London attack: Terrorism expert explains three threats of jihadism in the West
  21. New powerful telescopes allow direct imaging of nascent galaxies 12 billion light years away
  22. Using the placenta to understand how complex organs evolve
  23. How a study about Chronic Fatigue Syndrome was doctored, adding to pain and stigma
  24. What's the point of an ethics course?
  25. Why polls seem to struggle to get it right – on elections and everything else
  26. Immigrants deported under Obama share stories of terror and rights violations
  27. The age of hacking brings a return to the physical key
  28. 3-D printing turns nanomachines into life-size workers
  29. Children understand far more about other minds than long believed
  30. Reducing and reusing wastewater: Six essential reads for World Water Day
  31. Video games encourage Indigenous cultural expression
  32. Russia, an alleged coup and Montenegro's bid for NATO membership
  33. New health care law would lead to more smoking, disease and tobacco industry profits
  34. Why is water sacred to Native Americans?
  35. Supreme Court justices in the pews and on the bench – and where Neil Gorsuch fits in
  36. Making poetry their own: The evolution of poetry education
  37. How companies can stay ahead of the cybersecurity curve
  38. Private prisons, explained
  39. In today's anti-immigrant rhetoric, echoes of Virgil's 'Aeneid'
  40. Does 'green energy' have hidden health and environmental costs?
  41. What would MLK do if he were alive today: Six essential reads
  42. How I used math to develop an algorithm to help treat diabetes
  43. What dung beetles are teaching us about the genetics of sex differences
  44. Want to eat fish that's truly good for you? Here are some guidelines to reeling one in
  45. Tor upgrades to make anonymous publishing safer
  46. Can Silicon Valley's autocrats save democracy?
  47. Street harassment is a public health problem: The case of Mexico City
  48. Could Roe v. Wade be overturned?
  49. Stop obsessing over talent—everyone can sing
  50. Six charts that illustrate the divide between rural and urban America