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A turbulent future may be in store for US-Turkish relations

  • Written by Doga Ulas Eralp, Professorial Lecturer, American University School of International Service

Turkey’s June elections confirmed one important political reality in the country: The state always wins.

And that’s likely bad news for the future of Turkey’s long relationship with the United States.

I’m a scholar and practitioner of international conflict resolution who has studied Turkey and its relations with other...

Read more: A turbulent future may be in store for US-Turkish relations

What exactly is the point of the border?

  • Written by Michael Blake, Professor of Philosophy, Public Policy, and Governance, University of Washington
A 'no border wall' sign is held during a rally to oppose the wall the US government wants to build.AP Photo/Eric Gay

The past few weeks have seen widespread outrage over the Trump administration’s now-defunct policy of separating migrant families at the border. Four members of the president’s Homeland Security advisory council have...

Read more: What exactly is the point of the border?

New Mexico case should serve as wake-up call on school funding

  • Written by Derek W. Black, Professor of Law, University of South Carolina
A court has ruled that New Mexico isn't ensuring that its students get an adequate education.Lisa F. Young /shutterstock.com

A New Mexico trial court recently found that the state has been failing in its constitutional duty to ensure that all students receive an adequate education. The court ordered the state to come up with a fix by next April. In...

Read more: New Mexico case should serve as wake-up call on school funding

Artificial intelligence outperforms the repetitive animal tests in identifying toxic chemicals

  • Written by Thomas Hartung, Professor of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
These rats are in special cages for urine collection. Every year, millions of animals are used for testing chemicals that are used in industrial products.By unoL/shutterstock.com

Most consumers would be dismayed with how little we know about the majority of chemicals. Only 3 percent of industrial chemicals – mostly drugs and pesticides...

Read more: Artificial intelligence outperforms the repetitive animal tests in identifying toxic chemicals

Why are there so many suckers? A neuropsychologist explains

  • Written by Stacey Wood, Professor of Psychology, Scripps College
Is it a scam?Tero Vesalainen/shutterstock.com

If you have a mailbox, you probably get junk mail. If you have an email account, you probably get spam. If you have a phone, you probably get robocalls.

Unwanted messages and solicitations bombard us on a regular basis. Most of us hit ignore or delete or toss junk mail in the trash knowing that these...

Read more: Why are there so many suckers? A neuropsychologist explains

AI more accurate than animal testing for spotting toxic chemicals

  • Written by Thomas Hartung, Professor of Environmental Health and Engineering, Johns Hopkins University
These rats are in special cages for urine collection. Every year, millions of animals are used for testing chemicals that are used in industrial products.By unoL/shutterstock.com

Most consumers would be dismayed with how little we know about the majority of chemicals. Only 3 percent of industrial chemicals – mostly drugs and pesticides...

Read more: AI more accurate than animal testing for spotting toxic chemicals

40 years after the birth of IVF, researchers push boundaries to preserve fertility in women, men and children

  • Written by Marie Menke, Assistant Professor of Obstetrics, Gynecology & Reproductive Sciences, University of Pittsburgh
New procedures are enabling men and women to preserve their fertility until they are ready or able to have children.By kristiillustra/shutterstock.com

Tears are a regular occurrence in a fertility clinic. Tears of joy, tears of frustration, tears of loss happen almost daily. For some, those tears are the tears of “what if.” What if I...

Read more: 40 years after the birth of IVF, researchers push boundaries to preserve fertility in women, men...

Why it's hard to hold contractors accountable for the suffering of immigrant children

  • Written by Susan M. Sterett, Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Students and community activists at Northeastern University called on the school to nix an ICE contract.AP Photo/Sarah Betancourt

Public outrage over the Trump administration’sdetention of children, including babies, brought across the border when their families arrived seeking asylum is still simmering, as the number of lawsuits over this...

Read more: Why it's hard to hold contractors accountable for the suffering of immigrant children

Russians hacked into US electric utilities: 6 essential reads

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation US
Who's in control of what's flowing in these wires?D Sharon Pruitt, CC BY

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has revealed that Russian government hackers have gained deep access to hundreds of U.S. electrical utility companies, gaining far more access to the operations of many more companies than previously disclosed by federal officials.

Securi...

Read more: Russians hacked into US electric utilities: 6 essential reads

Money, politics and Justice Anthony Kennedy: Revisiting Citizens United

  • Written by Michael T. Morley, Assistant Professor of Law, Florida State University

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission is one of retiring U.S. Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy’s most maligned rulings. Many condemn the opinion for treating corporations as people, money as speech, and elections as commodities to be sold to the highest bidder.

President Barack Obama lambasted Citizens United in a State of the...

Read more: Money, politics and Justice Anthony Kennedy: Revisiting Citizens United

More Articles ...

  1. FBI brought down foreign agents in the past
  2. What's the value of a clean beach? Here's how economists do the numbers
  3. Mexican anti-poverty program targeting poor women may help men most, study finds
  4. Why does my phone battery die so fast?
  5. Lending a helping paw: Dogs will aid their crying human
  6. 3 questions about tequila, answered
  7. Sex education lessons from Mississippi and Nigeria
  8. Putin's interference in US elections undermines faith in American democracy
  9. Por qué Trump no ha sido impugnado y es probable que nunca lo sea
  10. Uso del español en EEUU no aumenta, pese a la inmigración latina
  11. El uso del español en EEUU no aumenta, pese a la inmigración latina
  12. No aumenta el uso del español en EEUU, a pesar del miedo político sobre la inmigración
  13. How the Mormon church's past shapes its position on immigration today
  14. As emerging economies bring their citizens online, global trust in internet media is changing
  15. As New York looks into whether the Trump Foundation broke the law, criminal charges remain unlikely
  16. The Federal Reserve needs to remain independent of the whims of politicians
  17. Putin the hero
  18. Israel’s new nation-state law restates the obvious
  19. Why do paper cuts hurt so much?
  20. What is behind belief in weeping Virgin Mary statues
  21. A brief history of ketchup
  22. How free should speech on campus be?
  23. How old is my pet in dog years or cat years? A veterinarian explains
  24. America is in the middle of a battle over the meaning of words like 'diversity'
  25. 'Traveling while black' guidebooks may be out of print, but still resonate today
  26. Pathogens attack plants like hackers, so my lab thinks about crop protection like cybersecurity
  27. Who owns the moon? A space lawyer answers
  28. Support for the Endangered Species Act remains high as Trump administration and Congress try to gut it
  29. Naloxone remains controversial to some, but here's why it shouldn't be
  30. Why the war on poverty in the US isn't over, in 4 charts
  31. Bloody uprising in Nicaragua could trigger the next Central American refugee crisis
  32. How virtual worlds can recreate the geographic history of life
  33. Cómo las ciudades pueden ayudar a los inmigrantes a sentirse en casa: 4 gráficos
  34. What makes Putin's vision of a Russian-US oil alliance a pipedream
  35. US health care companies begin exploring blockchain technologies
  36. MGM is suing the victims of the worst mass shooting in US history. Here's why
  37. Reeling from the news? Train your brain to feel better with these 4 techniques
  38. What is heaven?
  39. How the PROSPER Act could negatively impact LGBTQ students
  40. Has Trump violated his oath of office? A primer on presidential duty and accountability
  41. ¿Qué hace ICE, la agencia federal que aplica las leyes de inmigración d EEUU?
  42. ¿Qué hace ICE, la agencia federal que aplica las leyes de inmigración en EEUU?
  43. The US is a whole lot richer because of trade with Europe, regardless of whether EU is friend or 'foe'
  44. Ozone pollution in US national parks is nearly the same as in large cities
  45. New treatment in the works for disfiguring skin disease, vitiligo
  46. Health clubs using tanning beds to attract members despite cancer risks, new study shows
  47. What criminal conspiracy charges against an alleged Russian spy might mean for the NRA: 3 questions answered
  48. Why proactive leadership is important – or how Congress could have prevented Trump's Helsinki fiasco
  49. The brainwashing myth
  50. How refugees in Britain went from living in old bunkers and stately homes to being detained in cells