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A look inside Ohio's lawsuit against opioid manufacturers

  • Written by Efthimios Parasidis, Associate Professor of Law and Public Health, The Ohio State University

Ohio made headlines when it became the second state to file a lawsuit against opioid manufacturers on May 31.

The suit names Purdue Pharma, Endo Health Solutions, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries and subsidiary Cephalon, Johnson & Johnson and subsidiary Janssen Pharmaceuticals and Allergan.

Ohio’s legal theory is based on a straightforward...

Read more: A look inside Ohio's lawsuit against opioid manufacturers

Pot with patents could plant the seeds of future lawsuits

  • Written by Craig Nard, Galen J. Roush Professor of Law; Director, Spangenberg Center for Law, Technology & the Arts and the FUSION Certificate Program in Design, Innovation & IP Management, Case Western Reserve University

It’s hard to make sense of cannabis regulation.

The Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) continues to categorize marijuana as a Schedule I drug. That means the government believes it has “no currently accepted medical use and a high potential for abuse,” putting it in the same league as LSD and heroin. The Trump administration...

Read more: Pot with patents could plant the seeds of future lawsuits

Why Abraham Lincoln is an icon for Republicans and Democrats alike

  • Written by Shawn Parry-Giles, Professor of Communication, University of Maryland
imageAfter his assassination, Abraham Lincoln became a beacon of the United States presidency.Bethany Moslen/shutterstock.com

During the 2016 Republican presidential primary, The Washington Post’s Bob Woodward and Robert Costa asked Donald Trump if he could be a “unifier” like Abraham Lincoln who expressed “‘Malice toward...

Read more: Why Abraham Lincoln is an icon for Republicans and Democrats alike

How Spam became one of the most iconic American brands of all time

  • Written by Ayalla A. Ruvio, Assistant Professor of Marketing, Michigan State University
imageEight billion cans sold and counting...abimages/Shutterstock.com

While you might think of Spam as a basic canned meat, it’s actually one of the greatest business success stories of all time: Since Hormel Foods Corporation launched the affordable, canned pork product in 1937, it’s sold over eight billion cans in 44 countries around the...

Read more: How Spam became one of the most iconic American brands of all time

Why poverty is not a personal choice, but a reflection of society

  • Written by Shervin Assari, Research Investigator of Psychiatry and Public Health, University of Michigan
imageA homeless camp in Los Angeles, where homelessness has risen 23 percent in the past year, in May 2017.AP Photo/Richard Vogel

As the Senate prepares to modify its version of the health care bill, now is a good time to back up and examine why we as a nation are so divided about providing health care, especially to the poor.

I believe one reason the...

Read more: Why poverty is not a personal choice, but a reflection of society

Why on July 4 should we remember the psalm 'By the Rivers of Babylon'?

  • Written by David W. Stowe, Professor of English and Religious Studies, Michigan State University
imageWhat is the meaning of the 2,500-year old Hebrew psalm for oppressed groups?Gebhard Fugel [Public domain], via Wikimedia Commons

On the anniversary of America’s independence, the abolitionist leader Frederick Douglass made a biblical Psalm – Psalm 137 – best known for its opening line, “By the Rivers of Babylon,” a...

Read more: Why on July 4 should we remember the psalm 'By the Rivers of Babylon'?

On the savanna, mobile phones haven't transformed Maasai lives – yet

  • Written by Timothy D. Baird, Assistant Professor of Geography, Virginia Tech
imageA group of Maasai men look at the mobile phone belonging to one of them.Timothy Baird, CC BY-ND

Mobile phones are everywhere. In fact, they may be nearly as common on the African savanna as they are on American subways.

With the explosion of mobile technology in developing countries, a common narrative is that phones are transforming poor...

Read more: On the savanna, mobile phones haven't transformed Maasai lives – yet

From public good to personal pursuit: Historical roots of the student debt crisis

  • Written by Thomas Adam, Professor of Transnational History, University of Texas Arlington
imageHas student debt changed because the purpose of education has changed?John Collier/Library of Congress, Ermolaev Alexander/Shutterstock.com

The promise of free college education helped propel Bernie Sanders’ 2016 bid for the Democratic nomination to national prominence. It reverberated during the confirmation hearings for Betsy DeVos as...

Read more: From public good to personal pursuit: Historical roots of the student debt crisis

When gospel sermons came on the phonograph

  • Written by Jerry Zolten, Associate Professor of Communication Arts and Sciences, Pennsylvania State University
imageOak Grove Acapella Singers, a Gospel group of Chester County, Tennessee, being recorded while singing in the office of the preacher at the Oak Grove Church of Christ. Tennessee State Library and Archives Follow, CC BY-NC-ND

The first truly African-American musical form, the “Spirituals,” took shape in the 17th and 18th centuries within...

Read more: When gospel sermons came on the phonograph

More Articles ...

  1. Will women vote for women in 2018? It depends on if they're married
  2. Want a satisfying relationship? Don't present yourself as a sex object
  3. How bills to replace Obamacare would especially harm women
  4. Why market competition has not brought down health care costs
  5. Putin's flacks: Russia's stealth public relations war
  6. America's dangerous love for pyrotechnics: 4 facts about fireworks
  7. Take that chocolate milk survey with a grain of salt
  8. New data set explores 90 years of natural disasters in the US
  9. Republican health care bills defy the party's own ideology
  10. Macron and Trudeau shouldn't be so proud of appointing women to their Cabinets
  11. The Venezuelan government's newest opponent is a state-funded orchestra
  12. How the homeless create homes
  13. New legislation may make free speech on campus less free
  14. Why it's important to understand social media's dark history
  15. Behind Modi: The growing influence of the India lobby
  16. Is energy 'dominance' the right goal for US policy?
  17. A dangerous mix: Bullied youth report access to loaded guns more than other youth
  18. Why Congress should let everyone deduct charitable gifts from their taxes
  19. 'NotPetya' ransomware attack shows corporate social responsibility should include cybersecurity
  20. 4 ways the Supreme Court could rule on Trump's travel ban
  21. Understanding the real innovation behind the iPhone
  22. How flu changes within the human body may hint at future global trends
  23. Is Nancy Pelosi worth the trouble?
  24. GOP health care bill would make rural America's distress much worse
  25. Elite public schools that rely on entry exams fail the diversity test
  26. Urban nature: What kinds of plants and wildlife flourish in cities?
  27. What Jeff Bezos gets wrong (and right) with his populist philanthropy
  28. Is Putin's Russia the critical threat Americans believe it to be?
  29. The iPhone turns 10 – and it's isolated us, not united us
  30. Could a tragedy like the Grenfell Tower fire happen in the U.S.?
  31. Why a 'cashless' society would hurt the poor: A lesson from India
  32. The Trump team's poor arguments for slashing SNAP
  33. Textbooks in the digital world
  34. Cash is falling out of fashion – will it disappear forever?
  35. Women in horror: Victims no more
  36. A pair of decades-old policies may change the way rural America gets local news
  37. What do protests about Harry Potter books teach us?
  38. The Supreme Court takes on gerrymandering: 6 essential reads
  39. 30 years after Edwards v. Aguillard: Why creationism lingers in public schools
  40. On Eid 2017, a peek into the lives of Puerto Rican Muslims
  41. What happens when the federal government eliminates health coverage? Lessons from the past
  42. People keep voting in support of the death penalty. So how can we end it?
  43. Energy wonks have a meltdown over the US going 100 percent renewable. Why?
  44. African-American Music Appreciation Month: 5 essential reads
  45. What happens if Trump's White House invokes executive privilege?
  46. Employment helps white men’s health more than women and blacks
  47. How to make sense of the Senate health care bill: 4 essential reads
  48. Forget the insight of a lone genius – innovation is an evolving process of trial and error
  49. From gay Nazis to 'we're here, we're queer': A century of arguing about gay pride
  50. Are LGBT Americans actually reaping the benefits of marriage?