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3 charts explain how Russians see Trump and US

  • Written by Erik C. Nisbet, Associate Professor of Communication, Political Science, and Environmental Policy and Faculty Associate with the Mershon Center for International Security Studies, The Ohio State University

Just before the one-on-one summit between President Vladimir Putin and Donald Trump held on July 16, Russian pollster VCIOM asked the Russian public how they viewed the American president and U.S.-Russian relations.

Though an authoritarian country, public opinion is still an important factor that the Russian government takes into account when...

Read more: 3 charts explain how Russians see Trump and US

As Putin-Trump summit nears, 3 charts explain how Russians see the US

  • Written by Erik C. Nisbet, Associate Professor of Communication, Political Science, and Environmental Policy and Faculty Associate with the Mershon Center for International Security Studies, The Ohio State University

Donald Trump sits down with Russian President Vladimir Putin on July 16 in Helsinki for their first one-on-one summit.

In anticipation of this event, Russian pollster VCIOM asked the Russian public this week about how they viewed the American president and U.S.-Russian relations. Though an authoritarian country, public opinion is still an...

Read more: As Putin-Trump summit nears, 3 charts explain how Russians see the US

Securing America's voting systems against spying and meddling

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation US
shutterstock

The federal indictments of 12 Russian government agents accuse them of hacking computers to spy on and meddle with the U.S. 2016 presidential election – including state and county election databases.

With the 2018 midterm congressional elections approaching – along with countless state and local elections – here are...

Read more: Securing America's voting systems against spying and meddling

Revisiting Jimmy Carter's truth-telling sermon to Americans

  • Written by David Swartz, Associate Professor of History, Asbury University
Employees at a gas station in Los Angeles watch President Jimmy Carter giving his energy speech over national television on July 15, 1979.AP Photo/Mao

Nearly 40 years ago, on July 15, 1979, President Jimmy Carter went on national television to share with millions of Americans his diagnosis of a nation in crisis. “All the legislation in the...

Read more: Revisiting Jimmy Carter's truth-telling sermon to Americans

Emmett Till's life matters

  • Written by Davis W. Houck, Professor, Florida State University
A 1950s photograph of Emmett Till and his mother Mamie Till Mobley, during a visit to Jackson, Miss.AP Photo/Rogelio V. Solis

The U.S. federal government is again investigating the case of Emmett Till’s murder, the Department of Justice has announced, bringing optimism that some measure of justice might ultimately prevail.

Nearly 63 years...

Read more: Emmett Till's life matters

Central American kids come to the US fleeing record-high youth murder rates at home

  • Written by Julio Ernesto Acuna Garcia, Assistant Professor, Economics Department, Universidad San Fracisco de Quito (Ecuador)

Gang violence and expanding criminal networks have made El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala – an area of Central America known as the “Northern Triangle” – some of the world’s most dangerous countries.

El Salvador’s homicide rate in 2016 – 109 murders per 100,000 people – was more than 25 times that...

Read more: Central American kids come to the US fleeing record-high youth murder rates at home

Spain's majority-female cabinet embodies women's global rise to power

  • Written by Susan Franceschet, Professor of Political Science, University of Calgary

Gender-equal governments, which include the same number of men and women as ministry heads and in other cabinet posts, used to be the purview of woman-friendly Nordic countries and highly progressive societies like Canada and Costa Rica.

No longer.

Mexico’s president-elect Andrés Manuel López Obrador, who takes office in...

Read more: Spain's majority-female cabinet embodies women's global rise to power

What is Novichok? A neurotoxicologist explains

  • Written by William Atchison, Professor of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Michigan State University
In this file photo taken on on Oct. 4, 1987, a Soviet army officer presents ammunition rigged with chemical agents during a visit by Western diplomats and journalists to a chemical weapons research facility in Shikhany, Saratov region, Russia. The facility in Shikhany led the efforts to develop Soviet chemical weapons, including Novichok-class...

Read more: What is Novichok? A neurotoxicologist explains

Scientist at work: Identifying individual gray wolves by their howls

  • Written by Angela Dassow, Assistant Professor of Biology, Carthage College
Each wolf calls with its own 'voice.'Angela Dassow, CC BY-ND

Love them or hate them, wolves are vital members of natural ecosystems and the health of a wolf population can be an important factor in maintaining balance among species. Wolf populations are growing in North America – the Great Lakes region in particular now supports over 3,700...

Read more: Scientist at work: Identifying individual gray wolves by their howls

When Trump calls Russia a 'competitor' for the US, he might be talking about natural gas exports

  • Written by Anna Mikulska, Nonresident Fellow in Energy Studies, Baker Institute for Public Policy, Rice University
Vladimir Putin, autographing a natural gas pipeline in VladivostokAP Photo/RIA Novosti, Alexei Druzhinin

President Donald Trump complained during recent NATO meetings and through Twitter about how, in his opinion, Germany is “captive to Russia” because of that country’s reliance on Russian energy, especially natural gas.

This...

Read more: When Trump calls Russia a 'competitor' for the US, he might be talking about natural gas exports

More Articles ...

  1. Trade wars will boost digital manufacturing – at consumers' own homes with personal 3D printers
  2. Why trade wars can be perilous: 5 essential reads
  3. As the World Cup winds down and the summit nears, Trump is playing Putin's game
  4. The IceCube observatory detects neutrino and discovers a blazar as its source
  5. Why meeting with Putin may just give Trump a popularity boost
  6. Are you suddenly interested in the Supreme Court? You're not alone
  7. Even self-driving cars need driver education
  8. All wildfires are not alike, but the US is fighting them that way
  9. Why vaccine opponents think they know more than medical experts
  10. Here's how to encourage more girls to pursue science and math careers
  11. Why the case of Jahi McMath is important for understanding the role of race for black patients
  12. Does thinking you look fat affect how much money you earn?
  13. The US is facing a serious shortage of airline pilots
  14. Derecho de asilo: El abuso doméstico y la violencia anti-gay sí se califican como 'persecución'
  15. Nicaragua intenta derrocar a un dictador (de nuevo)
  16. The travel ban in numbers: Why families and refugees lose big
  17. Triclosan, often maligned, may have a good side — treating cystic fibrosis infections
  18. Breastfeeding has been the best public health policy throughout history
  19. The pace of nonprofit media growth is picking up
  20. Trump isn't the first leader to rattle the world order
  21. How cities help immigrants feel at home: 4 charts
  22. Harnessing natural gas to harvest water from the air might solve 2 big problems at once
  23. Meet the foodies who are changing the way Americans eat
  24. Could human cancer treatments be the key to saving sea turtles from a disfiguring tumor disease?
  25. Silicon Valley, from 'heart’s delight' to toxic wasteland
  26. A long fuse: 'The Population Bomb' is still ticking 50 years after its publication
  27. AT T-Time Warner, net neutrality and how to make sense of the media merger frenzy
  28. Russia is top on NATO's agenda and Trump is the wild card
  29. Which 3-letter agency is enforcing US immigration laws at the border?
  30. Green-baiting lawmakers are accusing environmentalists of doubling as ‘foreign agents’
  31. Mourning death by suicide: How you can provide support for the bereaved
  32. Rock 'n' roll is noise pollution – with ecological implications that can spread through a food web
  33. To improve digital well-being, put your phone down and talk to people
  34. Supreme Court polarization is not inevitable — just look at Europe
  35. Inside the sacred danger of Thailand's caves
  36. A rare instance when preventative screening is worth the dollar cost
  37. Por qué el censo de 2020 no debería preguntar sobre tu ciudadanía
  38. Why is the Strait of Hormuz important?
  39. Silicon Valley's cautionary tale shows what can go wrong when charities get obsessed with growth
  40. 7.5 billion and counting: How many humans can the Earth support?
  41. How the Catholic Church came to oppose birth control
  42. Considering race in college admissions – 3 questions answered
  43. Alcohol's health benefits hard to prove, but harms are easy to document
  44. Is the Supreme Court's legitimacy undermined in a polarized age?
  45. What next for the EPA? Here's what Reagan did
  46. We estimate China only makes $8.46 from an iPhone – and that's why Trump's trade war is futile
  47. Poland's judicial purge another step toward authoritarian democracy
  48. Support for refugees increases when refugees participate in integration programs
  49. Sex and gender diversity is growing across the US
  50. The monster festival: A pilgrimage to small town America