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New 'Holocaust law' highlights crisis in Polish identity

  • Written by Geneviève Zubrzycki, Professor of Sociology, Director of the Weiser Center for Europe and Eurasia, University of Michigan

On Jan. 26, the eve of International Holocaust Remembrance Day, the Polish parliament voted in favor of a bill making it illegal to accuse Poland of complicity in Nazi crimes.

This caused immediate outrage around the world and nowhere more so than in a country that has been, until now, a close ally of Poland: Israel. Prime Minister Benjamin...

Read more: New 'Holocaust law' highlights crisis in Polish identity

When do-good nonprofits are bad at dealing with #MeToo moments

  • Written by Paul Battaglio, Professor, Economic, Political & Policy Sciences, Co-Editor-in-chief, Public Administration Review, University of Texas at Dallas
Former Humane Society chief Wayne Pacelle, flanked by Senators Richard Blumenthal (left) and Chuck Schumer (right), resigned amid allegations of sexual misconduct. Amy Sussman/AP Images for Humane Society of The United States

Scandals rocking the Humane Society and the Red Cross are the highest-profile examples so far of how the #MeToo movement is...

Read more: When do-good nonprofits are bad at dealing with #MeToo moments

Stocks hate inflation – here's why

  • Written by Richard S. Warr, Professor of Finance, North Carolina State University
Inflation may be a bull market's greatest enemy. AP Photo/Richard Drew

Stock markets have been on a wild ride recently, plunging one day and then soaring the next. Since its peak in late January, the Standard & Poor’s 500 index has declined more than 10 percent, signaling a market “correction” beyond just a temporary blip.

Pund...

Read more: Stocks hate inflation – here's why

Mark Twain's adventures in love: How a rough-edged aspiring author courted a beautiful heiress

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
The wife and daughters of Mark Twain.Albert Bigelow Paine

The year 2018 marks the 150th anniversary of one of the great courtships in American history, the wooing of an unenthusiastic 22-year-old Olivia Langdon by a completely smitten 32-year-old Samuel Langhorne Clemens, better known as Mark Twain.

As I first learned while visiting Twain’s...

Read more: Mark Twain's adventures in love: How a rough-edged aspiring author courted a beautiful heiress

No, opposites do not attract

  • Written by Matthew D. Johnson, Chair & Professor of Psychology and Director of the Marriage and Family Studies Laboratory, Binghamton University, State University of New York
It's likeness that makes the heart grow fonder.Zediajaab, CC BY-SA

Everyone seems to agree that opposites attract. Young and old people, happy and distressed couples, single folks and married partners – all apparently buy the classic adage about love. Relationship expertshave writtenbooks based on this assumption. It’s even been...

Read more: No, opposites do not attract

A look at Pyeongchang's heartwarming cuisine

  • Written by Soo Kang, Associate Professor of Hospitality Management, Colorado State University

As a middle schooler growing up in South Korea, I still vividly remember the 1988 Seoul Olympic Games. At the time, the country was a burgeoning democracy, and South Koreans were proud of hosting an international mega event.

I’ve since become a hospitality professor and researcher in the U.S. And thanks to the growing popularity of Korean...

Read more: A look at Pyeongchang's heartwarming cuisine

How a thrill-seeking personality helps Olympic athletes

  • Written by Kenneth Carter, Charles Howard Professor of Psychology, Oxford College, Emory University

One of the main draws of the Winter Olympics is the opportunity to witness some of the most exciting and nail-biting athletic feats.

The daring events include the bobsled and downhill skiing. Then there’s the terrifying skeleton: Imagine barreling down a narrow chute of twisted ice-coated concrete at 125 miles per hour. Now imagine doing...

Read more: How a thrill-seeking personality helps Olympic athletes

Congress' budget dysfunction is more than 4 decades in the making

  • Written by Linda J. Bilmes, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Senior Lecturer in Public Policy and Public Finance, Harvard University
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell.AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

In an eleventh-hour twist, Sen. Rand Paul protested the costs of Congress’ latest budget deal and briefly shut down the federal government.

Then, in the wee hours of Feb. 9, both houses of Congress eventually voted to pass the budget...

Read more: Congress' budget dysfunction is more than 4 decades in the making

15 questions to determine if your relationship is Hall of Fame material or a strikeout

  • Written by Gary W. Lewandowski Jr., Chair and Professor of Psychology, Monmouth University
Relationship science can weigh in on whether you're with a winner.Evgeniia Trushkova/Shutterstock.com

Decisions are a part of life. At various times you may need to choose the best vacation spot, job candidate, babysitter, or place to live. Your most important decision may be figuring out your best romantic partner. Relationships matter – a...

Read more: 15 questions to determine if your relationship is Hall of Fame material or a strikeout

Why Trump's infrastructure ambitions are likely to stall

  • Written by Caroline Nowacki, PhD Candidate, Global Projects Center, Stanford University
The White House favors public-private partnerships for widening congested roads and getting other pricey projects done.AP Photo/Charles Dharapak

President Donald Trump recently raised the ante with his promise to unleash a wave of new infrastructure spending. During his first State of Union address, he conjured up images of “gleaming new...

Read more: Why Trump's infrastructure ambitions are likely to stall

More Articles ...

  1. 3 ways the US should prepare for the next flu pandemic
  2. 1 in 5 college students have anxiety or depression. Here's why
  3. Members of Congress respond to more than money – sometimes
  4. 'Back-burner relationships' are more common than you'd think
  5. To fully appreciate black history, the US must let go of lingering Confederate nostalgia
  6. Confucius has a message for business leaders who want to succeed: reflect
  7. Mangroves protect coastlines, store carbon – and are expanding with climate change
  8. How game theory could help ensure you will get blood when you need it
  9. The hidden superpower of 'Black Panther': Scientist role models
  10. Consumers are biggest losers of Trump's ongoing war on regulations
  11. When treating sports injuries, does the West do it best?
  12. What is 'right to try,' and could it help?
  13. DC graduation scandal shows how chronic absenteeism threatens America's schools
  14. Is full transparency good for democracy?
  15. What the joyous solitude of early hermits can teach us about being alone
  16. More bad news for dinosaurs: Chicxulub meteorite impact triggered global volcanic eruptions on the ocean floor
  17. Why privatizing Puerto Rico's power grid won't solve its energy problems
  18. La privatización de PREPA compromete el desarrollo energético de Puerto Rico
  19. Estate planning for your digital assets
  20. Suicide isn't just a 'white people thing'
  21. What's the difference between sexual abuse, sexual assault, sexual harassment and rape?
  22. Are traffic-clogged US cities ready for congestion pricing?
  23. The Cleveland Indians' Chief Wahoo isn't going away anytime soon
  24. How childhood experiences contribute to the education-health link
  25. Black Americans mostly left behind by progress since Dr. King's death
  26. If football is so deadly, why did 103 million people watch the Super Bowl?
  27. Why the global stock market crash doesn't really matter
  28. Your mobile phone can give away your location, even if you tell it not to
  29. How one state bridged the cultural divide on climate change to prepare for a stormier future
  30. Teens aren't just risk machines – there's a method to their madness
  31. White men may be biggest winners when a city snags Amazon’s HQ2
  32. 5 things to know about North and South Korea
  33. Why treating addiction with medication should be carefully considered
  34. Trump's push for new offshore drilling is likely to run aground in California
  35. Sessions' war on pot could speed up marijuana legalization nationwide
  36. Improve your internet safety: 4 essential reads
  37. Your next hearing aid could be a video game
  38. How rich are the rich? If only you knew
  39. 5 charts show why the South is the least healthy region in the US
  40. 3 questions about the FISA court answered
  41. Trump and Nunes torch tradition of trust between Congress and FBI
  42. The complex history of 'In God We Trust'
  43. How Americans came to embrace meditation, and with it, Hinduism
  44. The transformation of the Super Bowl ad experience
  45. Fed up with Big Beer's incursion, independent craft breweries push back
  46. Debunking 3 myths behind 'chain migration' and 'low-skilled' immigrants
  47. Are autonomous cars really safer than human drivers?
  48. Black America's 'bleaching syndrome'
  49. Does energy storage make the electric grid cleaner?
  50. Does college turn people into liberals?