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How the tax package could sap the flow of charitable giving

  • Written by Patrick Rooney, Executive Associate Dean for Academic Programs, Professor of Economics and Philanthropic Studies, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
imageHouse Speaker Paul Ryan, left, leads a round of applause after his colleagues took a step toward changing the tax code.AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

The tax bills currently making their way through Congress could end up making Americans less charitable.

The bills that recently cleared the House and the Senate, which need to be reconciled, would have...

Read more: How the tax package could sap the flow of charitable giving

Literature has long been sounding the alarm about sexual violence in Hollywood

  • Written by Billy J. Stratton, Professor of American Literature and Culture; Native American Studies, University of Denver
imageFor decades, novels have implored readers to look beyond the glamour and riches.Trey Ratcliff, CC BY-NC-SA

Recent revelations about Hollywood’s culture of sexual harassment and violence might come as a surprise to many Americans.

After all, Los Angeles – home of what some call “the American image factory” – has long...

Read more: Literature has long been sounding the alarm about sexual violence in Hollywood

How a group of California nuns challenged the Catholic Church

  • Written by Diane Winston, Associate Professor and Knight Center Chair in Media & Religion, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
imageImmaculate Heart College Art Department c. 1955. Photograph by Fred Swartz. Image courtesy of the Corita Art Center, Immaculate Heart Community, Los Angeles.

California in the 1960s was the epicenter for spiritual experimentation. Indian gurus and New Age prophets, Jesus freaks and Scientologists all found followings in the Golden State.

But among...

Read more: How a group of California nuns challenged the Catholic Church

Venezuela's elections are just a new way for Maduro to cling to power

  • Written by Benigno Alarcón, Director of the Center for Political Studies, Andres Bello Catholic University (UCAB)

Leer en español.

Nicolás Maduro, president of crisis-stricken Venezuela, will run for reelection in Venezuela in 2018, Vice President Tarick Al Aisammi announced in a Nov. 29 press conference.

Just a few months ago, it would have seemed unlikely that the Maduro regime would opt for elections as a way to hold onto power. After three...

Read more: Venezuela's elections are just a new way for Maduro to cling to power

Bajo Maduro, las elecciones venezolanas son otra forma de mantener el poder

  • Written by Benigno Alarcón, Director of the Center for Political Studies, Andres Bello Catholic University (UCAB)

Read in English.

El Presidente venezolano, Nicolás Maduro, buscará reelección en 2018, según anunció Vice Presidente Tarick Al Aisammi el 29 de noviembre.

Hace unos meses atrás habría sido difícil predecir que el régimen de Maduro se animaría a emprender una secuencia de...

Read more: Bajo Maduro, las elecciones venezolanas son otra forma de mantener el poder

The obscure federal agency that soon could raise your electric bill: 5 questions answered on FERC

  • Written by Joshua D. Rhodes, Research Fellow of Energy, University of Texas at Austin
imageMaking sense of the Department of Energy's plan. Shutterstock.com

Editor’s note: On or before Dec. 11, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission is expected to take action on a controversial proposal by Energy Secretary Rick Perry that seeks to prevent noncompetitive coal and nuclear power plants from retiring...

Read more: The obscure federal agency that soon could raise your electric bill: 5 questions answered on FERC

President Trump's national monument rollback is illegal and likely to be reversed in court

  • Written by Nicholas Bryner, Emmett/Frankel Fellow in Environmental Law and Policy, University of California, Los Angeles
imageSupporters of the Bears Ears and Grand Staircase-Escalante national monuments during a rally Saturday, Dec. 2, 2017 in Salt Lake City.AP Photo/Rick Bowmer

On Dec. 4, President Trump traveled to Utah to sign proclamations downsizing Bears Ears National Monument by 85 percent and Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument by nearly 50 percent....

Read more: President Trump's national monument rollback is illegal and likely to be reversed in court

The constitutional right to education is long overdue

  • Written by Derek W. Black, Professor of Law, University of South Carolina
imageSCOTUSJ. Main / Shutterstock.com

Public school funding has shrunk over the past decade. School discipline rates reached historic highs. Large achievement gaps persist. And the overall performance of our nation’s students falls well below our international peers.

These bleak numbers beg the question: Don’t students have a constitutional...

Read more: The constitutional right to education is long overdue

Why the president's anti-Muslim tweets could increase tensions

  • Written by Michael Pasek, NSF Graduate Research Fellow, Pennsylvania State University
imageAP Photo/Andrew Harnik, File

Last week, President Trump retweeted to his nearly 44 million followers a series of videos purporting to show Muslims assaulting people and destroying Christian statues. These videos, originally shared by an extremist anti-Muslim group in the U.K., were shown to be inaccurate and misleading.

In response to widespread...

Read more: Why the president's anti-Muslim tweets could increase tensions

A new collaborative approach to investigate what happens in the brain when it makes a decision

  • Written by Anne Churchland, Associate Professor of Neuroscience, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
imageWhat's going on in there when you decide?Sergey Nivens/Shutterstock.com

Decisions span a vast range of complexity. There are really simple ones: Do I want an apple or a piece of cake with my lunch? Then there are much more complicated ones: Which car should I buy, or which career should I choose?

Neuroscientists like me have identified some of the...

Read more: A new collaborative approach to investigate what happens in the brain when it makes a decision

More Articles ...

  1. How the tax bill opens wide a big back door to overhaul health care
  2. Turning hurricanes into music: Can listening to storms help us understand them better?
  3. Two little-known ways GOP tax bill would make chasm between rich and poor even wider
  4. Taking a second look at the learn-to-code craze
  5. Should lying to the FBI be a crime?
  6. When should you unfriend someone on Facebook?
  7. Why psychiatrists should not be involved in presidential politics
  8. Historic tax overhaul nears finish line: 5 essential reads
  9. The new tax bill will make Americans less healthy – and that's bad for the economy
  10. The latest threat to peace in Colombia: Congress
  11. The GOP doesn't care if you like their tax plan. Here's why
  12. The GOP doesn't care if you like its tax plan. Here's why
  13. Tax bill's attack on higher education undermines America's economic vitality
  14. Is the British monarchy actually adapting to changing social norms?
  15. Teaching machines to teach themselves
  16. Could the ERA pass in the #Metoo era?
  17. Why society should talk about forced sex in intimate relationships, too
  18. Stop criticizing bizarrely shaped voting districts. They might not be gerrymandered after all
  19. Who are the Baha'is and why are they so persecuted?
  20. Charles Manson and the perversion of the American dream
  21. In growing algae for biofuels, it matters who used the water last
  22. Why Silicon Valley wants you to text and drive
  23. Atomic age began 75 years ago with the first controlled nuclear chain reaction
  24. Got a boss who denies reality? A behavioral scientist's guide to tactful truth telling
  25. Kurdistan earthquake: politics creates roadblocks to relief
  26. Kurdistan earthquake: Politics create roadblocks to relief
  27. A tax increase that's proven to save lives
  28. As students near graduation, career and technical education provides a boost
  29. Living and aging well with HIV: New strategies and new research
  30. Rosie the Riveters discovered a wartime California dream
  31. Has Trump's presidency triggered the movement against sexual harassment?
  32. Taxpayers want more fairness. GOP plan to 'reform' the tax code doesn't deliver
  33. When envisioning the future of TV, think of a shopping mall
  34. Fewer crops are feeding more people worldwide – and that's not good
  35. An ethical guide to responsible giving
  36. The messy reality of religious liberty in America
  37. Philip Morris hides data in plain sight on dangers of new heat-not-burn product
  38. An armed robber's Supreme Court case could affect all Americans' digital privacy for decades to come
  39. Each volcano has unique warning signs that eruption is imminent
  40. Redefining 'safety' for self-driving cars
  41. Parole violations are driving prison’s revolving door
  42. Why faith inspires people to give
  43. Keeping score of 'friends' on Facebook and Instagram may be harmful to your health
  44. Government regulation of social media would be a 'cure' far worse than the disease
  45. Chile heads into presidential runoff with a transformed political landscape
  46. Learning by giving: How today's students can become tomorrow's philanthropists
  47. 5 reasons why people give their money away – plus 1 why they don't
  48. Studying circadian rhythms in plants and their pathogens might lead to precision medicine for people
  49. Before Breitbart, there was the Charleston News and Courier
  50. What the latest FBI data do and do not tell us about hate crimes in the US