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The biggest nonprofit media outlets are thriving but smaller ones may not survive

  • Written by Bill Birnbauer, Adjunct Senior Lecturer, School of Media, Film and Journalism, Monash University
More money but not for allHyejin Kang/Shutterstock.com

Richard Tofel, ProPublica’s president and founding general manager, likes to say the U.S. nonprofit news site was “born on third base.” Indeed, when the Pulitzer-winning outlet launched in 2008, ProPublica had US$10 million in its coffers from Herb and Marion Sandler. The...

Read more: The biggest nonprofit media outlets are thriving but smaller ones may not survive

Want better tips? Go for gold

  • Written by Na Young Lee, Assistant Professor of Marketing, University of Dayton
Researchers studied whether subtly being exposed to different colors could change tipping behavior.Anutr Yossundara/Shutterstock.com

Although tipping is generally thought to be a voluntary payment meant to express gratitude to a service worker, the history of tipping suggests that it originated as a way for people to flaunt their wealth.

But what if...

Read more: Want better tips? Go for gold

El Chapo trial shows why a wall won't stop drugs from crossing the US-Mexico border

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong
An artist's sketch of Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzmán at a 2018 pretrial hearing in a Brooklyn Federal courthouse.Elizabeth Williams via AP, File

The trial of Mexican drug kingpin Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán Loera has exposed just how powerful Mexico’s cartels really are.

The trial has now run for two months. On Jan....

Read more: El Chapo trial shows why a wall won't stop drugs from crossing the US-Mexico border

Brexit: An ‘escape room’ with no escape

  • Written by Terrence Guay, Clinical Professor of International Business, Pennsylvania State University

Brexit is beginning to look a lot like an “escape room” with no exit.

An escape room is an increasingly popular adventure game that requires participants to solve a series of puzzles before they can leave the room and advance into another one with additional riddles.

Brexit now seems to be a riddle that can’t be solved, after U.K. l...

Read more: Brexit: An ‘escape room’ with no escape

Garbage collection in Syria is crucial to fighting the Islamic State

  • Written by Mark Ward, Lecturer, University of Washington
Garbage piled up in the opposition-held city of Afrin, Syria, in March 2018.AP/Lefteris Pitarakis

Just a few years ago, I was a diplomat working on the Turkish-Syrian border. My job was managing the U.S. government team responsible for delivering aid to Syrian towns and cities loyal to the Syrian opposition.

These were towns that had turned against...

Read more: Garbage collection in Syria is crucial to fighting the Islamic State

States are on the front lines of fighting inequality

  • Written by Christopher Witko, Associate Director and Professor, School of Public Policy, Pennsylvania State University
Rally in support of raising the minimum wage in University City, Mo. AP Photo/Jeff Roberson

When Democrats regained control of the U.S. House of Representatives, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-N.Y., almost immediately took aim at America’s growing income inequality by recommending a 70 percent tax rate on income over US$10 million.

Income...

Read more: States are on the front lines of fighting inequality

New debit card for federal student loan borrowers could save money, but concerns linger

  • Written by Lewis Mandell, Professor Emeritus, Finance Department, School of Management, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
New debit cards being issued by the U.S. Department of Education could be used to track student spending.sakhorn/www.shutterstock.com

The U.S. Department of Education is about to pilot test a new debit card for students who get federal student loans.

For the federal government, it means less hassle and a way to get a glimpse at whether students are...

Read more: New debit card for federal student loan borrowers could save money, but concerns linger

Why victims of Catholic priests need to hear more than confessions

  • Written by Joan M. Cook, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Yale University
Pope Francis speaking to cardinals Dec. 21, 2018 at the Vatican. Filippo Monteforte/AP Pool

Pope Francis has criticized U.S. Catholic bishops for how they handled the pervasive sexual abuse of children by predatory priests. He even called for a new management method and mindset in dealing with this crisis. Most recently, the pope summoned...

Read more: Why victims of Catholic priests need to hear more than confessions

Ulterior motives may lurk behind new debit card for federal student loan borrowers

  • Written by Lewis Mandell, Professor Emeritus, Finance Department, School of Management, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
New debit cards being issued by the U.S. Department of Education could be used to track student spending.sakhorn/www.shutterstock.com

The U.S. Department of Education is about to pilot test a new debit card for students who get federal student loans.

For the federal government, it means less hassle and a way to get a glimpse at whether students are...

Read more: Ulterior motives may lurk behind new debit card for federal student loan borrowers

Trump's reference to Wounded Knee evokes the dark history of suppression of indigenous religions

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana
Wounded Knee Memorial at Wounded Knee, South Dakota.AP Photo/Russell Contreras

President Trump evoked the Wounded Knee massacre in a recent tweet. He was reacting to an Instagram video that Sen. Elizabeth Warren posted on New Year’s Eve.

There’s been considerable criticism of the president’s inaccurate portrayal of Native American...

Read more: Trump's reference to Wounded Knee evokes the dark history of suppression of indigenous religions

More Articles ...

  1. Leaders always 'manufacture' crises, in politics and business
  2. Toward a circular economy: Tackling the plastics recycling problem
  3. Many painful returns: Coping with crummy gifts
  4. Offices are too hot or too cold – is there a better way to control room temperature?
  5. Guatemala in crisis after president bans corruption investigation into his government
  6. The shutdown will harm the health and safety of Americans, even after it's long over
  7. How to train the body's own cells to combat antibiotic resistance
  8. Why do Muslim women wear a hijab?
  9. To preserve US national parks in a warming world, reconnect fragmented public lands
  10. Why privatizing the VA or other essential health services is a bad idea
  11. 3 reasons to pay attention to the LA teacher strike
  12. The Prohibition-era origins of the modern craft cocktail movement
  13. Memories of eating influence your next meal – new research pinpoints brain cells involved
  14. Change your phone settings so Apple, Google can't track your movements
  15. The 2019 government shutdown is just the latest reason why poor people can't bank on the safety net
  16. How one German city developed – and then lost – generations of math geniuses
  17. Chicago, New York discounted most public input in expanding bike systems
  18. Who are the federal workers affected by the shutdown? 5 questions answered
  19. Acute flaccid myelitis: What is the polio-like illness paralyzing US children?
  20. If Trump declares a national emergency, could Congress or the courts reverse it?
  21. Science gets shut down right along with the federal government
  22. How Viktor Orban degraded Hungary's weak democracy
  23. 3 ways to be smart on social media
  24. The quiet threat inside 'internet of things' devices
  25. Calling it a 'war on science' has consequences
  26. Federal workers begin to feel pain of shutdown as 800,000 lose their paychecks
  27. Virginia's uranium mining battle flips traditional views of federal and state power
  28. Mapping the world's 'blue carbon' hot spots in coastal mangrove forests
  29. The politics of fear: How fear goes tribal, allowing us to be manipulated
  30. More solutions needed for campus hunger
  31. The forgotten legacy of gay photographer George Platt Lynes
  32. How a government shutdown affects the economy
  33. Hearing hate speech primes your brain for hateful actions
  34. Renewed space rivalry between nations ignores a tradition of cooperation
  35. Remembering American saint Elizabeth Seton's legacy and how it continues to inspire work with immigrants
  36. With the right guiding principles, carbon taxes can work
  37. With foreign bureaus slashed, freelancers are filling the void – at their own risk
  38. Who's more compassionate, Republicans or Democrats?
  39. The downside of doing good with a market mindset
  40. Tumor-free flounder are just 1 dividend from the cleanup of Boston Harbor
  41. The science of the deal: A negotiation expert explains how Trump and the Democrats could both end the shutdown with a win
  42. Trump calls border a 'crisis of the soul': 3 scholars react to his Oval Office address
  43. Countering Russian disinformation the Baltic nations' way
  44. Stopping partisan gerrymandering is more complicated than you think
  45. Families are choosing between their health and staying together
  46. Rotating black holes may serve as gentle portals for hyperspace travel
  47. Why Trump will likely lose the government shutdown
  48. How to increase your chances of sticking with your resolutions
  49. Is there a crisis at the US-Mexico border? 6 essential reads
  50. Venezuelans reject Maduro presidency — but most would oppose foreign military operation to oust him