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What criminal conspiracy charges against an alleged Russian spy might mean for the NRA: 3 questions answered

  • Written by Brian Galle, Professor of Law, Georgetown University
Maria Butina, founder of a Russian gun group, allegedly infiltrated the Republican Party. AP Photo

Editor’s note: U.S. authorities have arrested Mariia Butina, a Russian advocate for firearms ownership also known as Maria. In a criminal complaint that led to her indictment, the Justice Department accused her of secretly infiltrating American...

Read more: What criminal conspiracy charges against an alleged Russian spy might mean for the NRA: 3...

Why proactive leadership is important – or how Congress could have prevented Trump's Helsinki fiasco

  • Written by Thomas Bateman, Professor of Management, University of Virginia
Trump and Putin shake hands at the conclusion of their joint news conference.AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Imagine you’re speeding along on a highway. Suddenly, the traffic ahead of you slows, forcing you to hit the breaks. Eventually you arrive at the source of the bottleneck: a mattress lying in the right lane. One by one, your fellow...

Read more: Why proactive leadership is important – or how Congress could have prevented Trump's Helsinki fiasco

The brainwashing myth

  • Written by Rebecca Moore, Emerita Professor of Religious Studies, San Diego State University
We'll say someone's brainwashed only when we disagree with their beliefs or actions.lolloj/Shutterstock.com

Nearly 40 years ago, my two sisters, Carolyn Layton and Annie Moore, were among those who planned the mass deaths in Jonestown on Nov. 18, 1978.

Part of a movement called Peoples Temple, which was led by a charismatic pastor named Jim Jones,...

Read more: The brainwashing myth

How refugees in Britain went from living in old bunkers and stately homes to being detained in cells

  • Written by Jordanna Bailkin, Professor of History, University of Washington

Mass movement of refugees has turned into mass detention in many liberal democracies.

These are strange days to be writing about camps and refugees. As a historian of Britain and a scholar of refugee studies, I have studied how the U.K. handled mass encampments in its recent past, from the First World War to the 1980s.

As I write, the U.S....

Read more: How refugees in Britain went from living in old bunkers and stately homes to being detained in cells

Why attorneys represent immigrants for free

  • Written by Eduardo Capulong, Associate Dean for Clinical and Experiential Education; Professor of Law, The University of Montana
Honduran mother and child with a Border Patrol agent.

Scores of lawyers, paralegals and law students are volunteering to help immigrant families caught in the crosshairs of the Trump administration’s bid to drastically reduce the number of people without papers in the U.S. One of these movement’s highest priorities is assisting the more...

Read more: Why attorneys represent immigrants for free

Why Trump hasn't been impeached – and likely won't be

  • Written by Jacob Neiheisel, Assistant Professor in Political Science, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Trump with the men who would replace him -- Vice President Mike Pence on the left and House Speaker Paul Ryan on the left. Win McNamee/AP Pool

Editor’s note: Removing a president from office is a two-step process. The first step is impeachment. That’s when members of the House indict, or charge, an official with an impeachable offense....

Read more: Why Trump hasn't been impeached – and likely won't be

Americans distrusted US democracy long before Trump's Russia problem

  • Written by Ian Anson, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Historically, the high-water mark for American dissatisfaction with government was the 1970s — the era of Vietnam, Nixon and Watergate. AP Photo/John Duricka

White House special counsel Robert Mueller recently issued 12 indictments alleging that Russian intelligence agents sought to tilt the vote in Donald Trump’s favor by hacking...

Read more: Americans distrusted US democracy long before Trump's Russia problem

Electric scooters on collision course with pedestrians and lawmakers

  • Written by Jim Sallis, Professorial Fellow, Mary MacKillop Institute for Health Research, Australian Catholic University; Emeritus Professor, Department of Family Medicine and Public Health, University of California San Diego
A man in downtown Atlanta with an electric scooter on June 26, 2018. Brinley Hineman/ AP Photo

Electric scooters are appearing in many major cities across the country, bringing fun to riders, profits to scooter makers – and lots of potential risks to walkers and riders.

San Diego, where I live, is at the forefront of the proliferation of...

Read more: Electric scooters on collision course with pedestrians and lawmakers

Cómo vino la Iglesia Católica a oponerse al control de natalidad

  • Written by Lisa McClain, Professor of History and Gender Studies, Boise State University
El Papa Pablo VI prohibió el uso de anticonceptivos en 1968.AP Photo/Jim Pringle

Julio 2018 marca el 50 aniversario de la histórica “Humanae Vitae”, la estricta prohibición del Papa Pablo VI de la anticoncepción artificial, publicada después del desarrollo y evolución de la píldora...

Read more: Cómo vino la Iglesia Católica a oponerse al control de natalidad

Microprocessor designers realize security must be a primary concern

  • Written by Mark Hempstead, Associate Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Tufts University
Are microchips as secure as you think they should be?Yevhenii Kuchynskyi/Shutterstock.com

Computers’ amazing abilities to entertain people, help them work, and even respond to voice commands are, at their heart, the results of decades of technological development and innovation in microprocessor design. Under constant pressure to extract more...

Read more: Microprocessor designers realize security must be a primary concern

More Articles ...

  1. The rescued Thai boys are considering becoming monks — here's why
  2. Harvesting rain could help Caribbean countries keep the water on after hurricanes
  3. Multilingual learners doing better in US schools than previously thought
  4. When corporations take credit for green deeds their lobbying may tell another story
  5. How a positive outlook on the future may protect teens from violence
  6. How man and machine can work together to diagnose diseases in medical scans
  7. Pigments from microbes provide clue to evolution in ancient oceans – but weren't pink a billion years ago
  8. Thing-makers, tool freaks and prototypers: How the Whole Earth Catalog's optimistic message reinvented the environmental movement in 1968
  9. If the 12 indicted Russians never face trial in the US, can anything be gained?
  10. ¿Cómo 'quema' la grasa nuestro cuerpo?
  11. Understanding the emoji of solidarity
  12. How summer and diet damage your DNA, and what you can do
  13. Born in the USA: Having a baby is costly and confusing, even for a health policy expert
  14. Andrés Manuel López Obrador was elected to 'transform' Mexico. Can he do it?
  15. Why I teach math through knitting
  16. Do I want an always-on digital assistant listening in all the time?
  17. Trade war could chill China’s growing investment in US economy
  18. When race triggers a call to campus police
  19. How your social network could save you from a disaster
  20. 3 charts explain how Russians see Trump and US
  21. As Putin-Trump summit nears, 3 charts explain how Russians see the US
  22. Securing America's voting systems against spying and meddling
  23. Revisiting Jimmy Carter's truth-telling sermon to Americans
  24. Emmett Till's life matters
  25. Central American kids come to the US fleeing record-high youth murder rates at home
  26. Spain's majority-female cabinet embodies women's global rise to power
  27. What is Novichok? A neurotoxicologist explains
  28. Scientist at work: Identifying individual gray wolves by their howls
  29. When Trump calls Russia a 'competitor' for the US, he might be talking about natural gas exports
  30. Trade wars will boost digital manufacturing – at consumers' own homes with personal 3D printers
  31. Why trade wars can be perilous: 5 essential reads
  32. As the World Cup winds down and the summit nears, Trump is playing Putin's game
  33. The IceCube observatory detects neutrino and discovers a blazar as its source
  34. Why meeting with Putin may just give Trump a popularity boost
  35. Are you suddenly interested in the Supreme Court? You're not alone
  36. Even self-driving cars need driver education
  37. All wildfires are not alike, but the US is fighting them that way
  38. Why vaccine opponents think they know more than medical experts
  39. Here's how to encourage more girls to pursue science and math careers
  40. Why the case of Jahi McMath is important for understanding the role of race for black patients
  41. Does thinking you look fat affect how much money you earn?
  42. The US is facing a serious shortage of airline pilots
  43. Derecho de asilo: El abuso doméstico y la violencia anti-gay sí se califican como 'persecución'
  44. Nicaragua intenta derrocar a un dictador (de nuevo)
  45. The travel ban in numbers: Why families and refugees lose big
  46. Triclosan, often maligned, may have a good side — treating cystic fibrosis infections
  47. Breastfeeding has been the best public health policy throughout history
  48. The pace of nonprofit media growth is picking up
  49. Trump isn't the first leader to rattle the world order
  50. How cities help immigrants feel at home: 4 charts