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Japan’s next emperor is a modern, multilingual environmentalist

  • Written by Constantine Nomikos Vaporis, Professor of History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

For the first time in 217 years, a Japanese emperor will cede his place on the imperial throne.

On April 30, Japan’s ailing 85-year-old Emperor Akihito will abdicate and be replaced the following day by his 59-year-old son, Crown Prince Naruhito.

Naruhito and his wife, Crown Princess Masako, are a modern couple. Both have studied overseas...

Read more: Japan’s next emperor is a modern, multilingual environmentalist

In India, WhatsApp is a weapon of antisocial hatred

  • Written by Rohit Chopra, Associate Professor of Communication, Santa Clara University
Smartphones are a conduit for misinformation about the Indian election.AP Photo/Manish Swarup

A general election in India, the world’s most populous democracy, seems a theoretical impossibility. Collecting the votes of nearly a billion people across a staggeringly diverse subcontinent has for more than half a century faced challenges of logist...

Read more: In India, WhatsApp is a weapon of antisocial hatred

Can the census ask if you're a citizen? Here's what's at stake in the Supreme Court battle over the 2020 census

  • Written by Jonathan Entin, Professor Emeritus of Law and Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Case Western Reserve University
Citizenship may be included in the next census questionnaire.Maria Dryfhout/shutterstock.com

For the first time in decades, the 2020 census might include a question asking whether or not each counted person is a citizen.

When Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross directed that the 2020 census include that question, he claimed that it was necessary to...

Read more: Can the census ask if you're a citizen? Here's what's at stake in the Supreme Court battle over...

Qué piensan realmente los hispanos acerca de Trump

  • Written by Stella Rouse, Associate Professor of Government and Politics and Director of the Center for American Politics and Citizenship, University of Maryland
Hispanic voters are not a monolith.Baiterek Media/shutterstock.com

Por primera vez en la historia se espera que los votantes hispanos sean el grupo minoritario más grande en el electorado del año 2020, según el Centro de Investigación Pew.

Con su reelección en la mira, no es sorprendente que el presidente Donald...

Read more: Qué piensan realmente los hispanos acerca de Trump

What happens when a big business tries to take over and rename a neighborhood

  • Written by Raechel A. Portelli, Assistant Professor of Geography, Michigan State University
Do you know where you are right now?Ana de Sousa/shutterstock.com

What if Google tried to rename your neighborhood?

That happened to some Californians in spring 2018, when Google Maps changed the moniker of three San Francisco neighborhoods – Rincon Hill, South Beach and South Market – to “East Cut.”

Given the extensive reach...

Read more: What happens when a big business tries to take over and rename a neighborhood

How 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame' inspired the cathedral's 19th-century revival

  • Written by Julia Walker, Assistant Professor of Art History, Binghamton University, State University of New York
The gargoyles that sit on Notre Dame today were installed as a nod to the cathedral's past.Noemiseh91/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

On April 15, people around the world watched in horror as a voracious fire consumed the medieval wooden roof of Paris’s Notre Dame cathedral and felled its spire.

The following day brought some measure of relief:...

Read more: How 'The Hunchback of Notre Dame' inspired the cathedral's 19th-century revival

Did Trump obstruct justice? 5 questions Congress must answer

  • Written by David Orentlicher, Professor of Law and Co-Director, Health Law Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Pages from Robert Mueller's final report on the special counsel investigation into Donald Trump, which show heavy redaction by the Department of Justice.AP Photo/Jon Elswick

“If we had confidence after a thorough investigation of the facts that the President of the United States did not commit obstruction of justice, we would so state....

Read more: Did Trump obstruct justice? 5 questions Congress must answer

How artificial intelligence systems could threaten democracy

  • Written by Steven Feldstein, Frank and Bethine Church Chair of Public Affairs & Associate Professor, School of Public Service, Boise State University

U.S. technology giant Microsoft has teamed up with a Chinese military university to develop artificial intelligence systems that could potentially enhance government surveillance and censorship capabilities. Two U.S. senators publicly condemned the partnership, but what the National Defense Technology University of China wants from Microsoft...

Read more: How artificial intelligence systems could threaten democracy

Will Netflix eventually monetize its user data?

  • Written by Jason Mittell, Professor of Film & Media Culture, Middlebury
Netflix currently spends much more cash than it brings in, leading to consistent negative cash flow and a mountain of debt.sakhorn/Shutterstock.com

Even in the wake of a recent mixed earning report and volatile stock prices, Netflix remains the media success story of the decade. The company, whose user base has grown rapidly, now boasts almost 150...

Read more: Will Netflix eventually monetize its user data?

'You're unallocated!' and other BS companies use to obscure reality

  • Written by Kate Suslava, Assistant Professor of Management, Bucknell University

Corporate America has invented many ways to avoid letting the public know it’s laying people off – or telling employees themselves “You’re fired.”

Common parlance includes “downsizing,” “headcount management,” “restucturing” or even the unsightly “involuntary separation program...

Read more: 'You're unallocated!' and other BS companies use to obscure reality

More Articles ...

  1. 5 things to consider before you hire a tutor for your child
  2. Who are Sri Lanka's Christians?
  3. To solve climate change and biodiversity loss, we need a Global Deal for Nature
  4. Bringing the border closer to home, one immersion trip at a time
  5. Why political meddling with central banks is a terrible idea – and the Federal Reserve is no exception
  6. War games shed light on real-world strategies
  7. When is dead really dead? Study on pig brains reinforces that death is a vast gray area
  8. Mueller report: How Congress can and will follow up on an incomplete and redacted document
  9. What happens next with the Mueller report? 3 essential reads
  10. A comedian who played a president on TV might actually become Ukraine's president
  11. A comedian who played a president on TV just became Ukraine's president
  12. Trump declares economic war on Cuba
  13. If my measles shot was years ago, am I still protected? 5 questions answered
  14. Bolsonaro's approval rating is worse than any past Brazilian president at the 100-day mark
  15. Brain scans help shed light on the PTSD brain, but they cannot diagnose PTSD
  16. As governments adopt artificial intelligence, there's little oversight and lots of danger
  17. Notre Dame's history is 9 centuries of change, renovation and renewal
  18. How Columbine became a blueprint for school shooters
  19. New cholesterol study may lead you to ask: Pass the eggs, or pass on the eggs?
  20. Should you apply to a college that has had a recent scandal?
  21. One year after Nicaraguan uprising, Ortega is back in control
  22. Abraham Lincoln, Joe Biden and the politics of touch
  23. Why Pete Buttigieg may be reviving progressive ideals of the Social Gospel Movement
  24. Russia isn't the first country to protest Western control over global telecommunications
  25. Sea creatures store carbon in the ocean – could protecting them help slow climate change?
  26. The new digital divide is between people who opt out of algorithms and people who don't
  27. A political stalemate over Puerto Rican aid is leaving all US disaster funding in limbo
  28. In Notre Dame fire, echoes of the 1837 blaze that destroyed Russia's Winter Palace
  29. The dirt on soil loss from the Midwest floods
  30. Boeing crashes and Uber collision show passenger safety relies on corporate promises, not regulators' tests
  31. What it means to ‘know your audience’ when communicating about science
  32. Journalism's Assange problem
  33. Marijuana legalization – a rare issue where women are more conservative than men
  34. How Hispanics really feel about Trump
  35. Brunei wants to punish gay sex with death by stoning – can boycotts stop it?
  36. Why Good Friday was dangerous for Jews in the Middle Ages and how that changed
  37. Top EPA advisers challenge long-standing air pollution science, threatening Americans' health
  38. A frenemy fungus provides clues about a new deadly one
  39. April 15 is the day tobacco companies pay $9 billion for tobacco illnesses, but is it enough?
  40. Retailers like Walmart are embracing robots – here's how workers can tell if they'll be replaced
  41. Mapping the US counties where traffic air pollution hurts children the most
  42. Leonardo joined art with engineering
  43. How the alt-right corrupts the Constitution
  44. Is 75 the new 65? Wealthy countries need to rethink what it means to be old
  45. Why LeBron James' I Promise School should be more like LeBron and not shy away from issues of race
  46. This small Mexican border town prizes its human and environmental links with the US
  47. The Mormon Church still doesn't accept same-sex couples – even if it no longer bars their children
  48. Civic crowdfunding reduces the risk of 'bikelash'
  49. Leonardo da Vinci saw in animals the ‘image of the world’
  50. Venezuela's crisis is a tragedy - but comedy gold for satire, cartoons and memes