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American Islam: a view from the suburbs

  • Written by Justine Howe, Assistant Professor, Department of Religious Studies , Case Western Reserve University

On June 10 Americans celebrated Muhammad Ali as a paragon of athletic prowess, dignity in the face of suffering and patriotic dissent.

But his fellow American Muslims more commonly find themselves cast as a “problem” for American religious pluralism and a threat to American security. They join a long list of religious groups who have...

Read more: American Islam: a view from the suburbs

The curious history of 'Mein Kampf' in France

  • Written by Manu Braganca, Research Fellow, Queen's University Belfast
imageAdolf Hitler and his entourage take a stroll in Paris on June 23, 1940.German Federal Archives/Wikimedia Commons

Seventy years after the death of Adolf Hitler, “Mein Kampf” is in the public domain and free to be republished.

The history of its English version is relatively well-known, thanks to historians James and Patience Barnes. Its...

Read more: The curious history of 'Mein Kampf' in France

Plate tectonics: new findings fill out the 50-year-old theory that explains Earth's landmasses

  • Written by Philip Heron, Postdoctoral Fellow in Geodynamics, University of Toronto
imageSatellite image of California's San Andreas fault, where two continental plates come together.NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team, CC BY

Fifty years ago, there was a seismic shift away from the longstanding belief that Earth’s continents were permanently stationary.

In 1966, J. Tuzo Wilson published Did the Atlantic...

Read more: Plate tectonics: new findings fill out the 50-year-old theory that explains Earth's landmasses

Why river floodplains are key to preserving nature and biodiversity in the western US

  • Written by Ric Hauer, Professor of Limnology, The University of Montana
imageGravel bed rivers and their floodplains are vital to local ecosystems and their ability to adapt to climate change. sandybrownjensen/flickr, CC BY-SA

Although they may not commonly be viewed as hotspots for biodiversity, gravel-bed river floodplains are by far the most important feature for nature across the landscapes of western North America.

This...

Read more: Why river floodplains are key to preserving nature and biodiversity in the western US

Most Americans believe we should have gun regulation. Here is why those who don’t are winning the debate.

  • Written by Ann Christiano, Frank Karel Chair in Public Interest Communications, University of Florida

There is a segment of the American population who believes passionately that guns are critical for personal protection against both violent individuals and governmental intrusion. They believe nothing should prevent them from getting the guns they need to do that.

There is another, larger group of Americans who believes passionately that we have...

Read more: Most Americans believe we should have gun regulation. Here is why those who don’t are winning the...

Can slower financial traders find a haven in a world of high-speed algorithms?

  • Written by Michael Wellman, Professor of Computer Science & Engineering, University of Michigan

It sounds like a scene from “Jurassic World”: fast, agile predators pursue their slower, less nimble prey, as the latter flee for safer pastures. Yet this ecology framework turns out to be an apt analogy for today’s financial markets, in which ultra-fast traders vie for profits against less speedy counterparts.

In fact, the...

Read more: Can slower financial traders find a haven in a world of high-speed algorithms?

Dr. Franklin, I presume? The founder who could have been our founding physician

  • Written by H W Brands, Professor of History, University of Texas at Austin
imageBenjamin Franklin observed many things about health, including the adverse effect of lead type.From www.shutterstock.com

When Benjamin Franklin deferred to Thomas Jefferson in the drafting of the Declaration of Independence, he did so for multiple reasons. He wished to avoid the annoyance of being edited by the committee of the whole Continental...

Read more: Dr. Franklin, I presume? The founder who could have been our founding physician

Fading hope: why the youth of the Arab Spring are still unemployed

  • Written by Heath J. Prince, Research Scientist in Public Policy, University of Texas at Austin

The 2011 Arab Spring was a clear signal to governments and ruling parties that the time had come for reform, if not revolution. People in the Middle East and North Africa were demanding nothing less than sweeping political, social and economic change.

The upheaval was prompted by economic stagnation and a slow unraveling of social safety nets,...

Read more: Fading hope: why the youth of the Arab Spring are still unemployed

Playing a science-based video game? It might be all wrong

  • Written by Alex Leith, Doctoral Candidate in Media and Information Studies, Michigan State University

You look down from the sky, manipulating the world and seeing how it responds to your changes. You are able to alter vegetation and climate while watching their effects on the surrounding organisms. In this way, and many others, digital games provide excellent opportunities for players to learn about complicated subjects, including the concept of...

Read more: Playing a science-based video game? It might be all wrong

Where are new college grads going to find jobs?

  • Written by Michael Betz, Assistant Professor of Human Development and Family Science, The Ohio State University
imageTo which cities are young graduates headed?University of the Fraser Valley, CC BY

College graduates of the new millennium are different than previous generations. Not just because they prefer Snapchat to email and have mountains of school loans, but also because of their choices of where to live.

In the past, several factors such as the proportion...

Read more: Where are new college grads going to find jobs?

More Articles ...

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  2. Explaining the Istanbul bombing: Turkey's six foreign policy sins
  3. Green and cool roofs provide relief for hot cities, but should be sited carefully
  4. Is there life after debt for Puerto Rico?
  5. How social media can distort and misinform when communicating science
  6. Concussions and kids: know the signs
  7. How TV dating shows helped change love and marriage in China forever
  8. Bikini islanders still deal with fallout of US nuclear tests, 70 years later
  9. Whatever the soul is, its existence can't be proved or disproved by natural science
  10. Early days of internet offer lessons for boosting 3D printing
  11. Can outsiders help Venezuela in the midst of crisis, again?
  12. Is it time to eliminate tenure for professors?
  13. Why Iran's anti-American hardliners want to buy US-made Boeings for Iran Air
  14. Criminal injustice: Wounds from incarceration that never heal
  15. Thorny technical questions remain for net neutrality
  16. Intolerance on the march: do Brexit and Trump point to global rejection of liberal ideals?
  17. Sex and other myths about weight loss
  18. Just graduated? Does it make you feel like a grown up?
  19. Even scientists take selfies with wild animals. Here's why they shouldn't.
  20. What's lost when we photograph life instead of experiencing it?
  21. Un-Trapped: Supreme Court strikes down Texas law limiting abortion
  22. How do food manufacturers pick those dates on their product packaging – and what do they mean?
  23. How do children learn to detect snakes, spiders and other dangerous things?
  24. Explainer: how Panama Canal expansion will transform shipping once again
  25. License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety
  26. Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data
  27. The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom
  28. Supreme Court immigration confusion? Blame the U.S. Senate
  29. Why the GM food labeling debate is not over
  30. Is it ethical to purchase human organs?
  31. Deadlocked: what a nine-word decision means for five million undocumented immigrants
  32. What explains Britain's Brexit shocker?
  33. What consumers want in GM food labeling is simpler than you think
  34. Eliminating inequalities needs affirmative action
  35. Why bad news for one Muslim American is bad news for all Muslims
  36. Britain exits the EU: how Brexit will hit America
  37. Does eating bamboo make it harder for pandas to reproduce?
  38. Will the new toxic chemical safety law protect us?
  39. After Supreme Court’s Fisher decision: what we need to know about considering race in admissions
  40. How the 2016 presidential election will shape American identity
  41. Trump's energy plan poses climate threat to U.S. economy
  42. How community schools can beat summer learning loss for low-income students
  43. Trump's dog whistle: the white, screwed-over sports icon
  44. Hate crimes against LGBTQ people are a public health issue
  45. Is Panama on the verge of a scientific brain drain?
  46. Why progressives should rescue the TPP trade deal
  47. How risky are the World Economic Forum’s top 10 emerging technologies for 2016?
  48. Can we harness bacteria to help clean up future oil spills?
  49. What summertime means for black children
  50. Is there a link between being in the closet and being homophobic?