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What Pope Francis' choice of a Pakistani cardinal means for Christians of the country

  • Written by Myriam Renaud, PhD Candidate in Religious Thought and Ethics, University of Chicago
Pakistani Christians attend Easter service in Lahore in April 2018.AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary

Pope Francis will create 14 cardinals on June 29, among them Pakistan’s Joseph Coutts, currently the archbishop of Karachi. What might come as a surprise to some people is that Pakistan, though a majority-Muslim country, is home to some 2.5 million...

Read more: What Pope Francis' choice of a Pakistani cardinal means for Christians of the country

US turned away thousands of Haitian asylum-seekers and detained hundreds more in the 90s

  • Written by A. Naomi Paik, Assistant Professor of Asian American Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Haitian refugees at the Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba, Sept. 7, 1994.AP Photo/Doug Mills

President Donald Trump’s “zero tolerance” immigration policies, where people crossing the border without documents are criminally prosecuted, do not represent the first time the U.S. has indefinitely detained immigrant children and families.

In...

Read more: US turned away thousands of Haitian asylum-seekers and detained hundreds more in the 90s

Extreme stress in childhood is toxic to your DNA

  • Written by Daniel R. Weinberger, Director of the Lieber Institute for Brain Development and Professor, Departments of Psychiatry, Neurology, Neuroscience and The Institute of Genetic Medicine, Johns Hopkins University
Photo by Kat J on Unsplash, CC BY-SA

The real danger of separating children from parents is not the psychological stress – it’s the biological time bomb. The screaming and crying, the anguish and desolation is gut-wrenching. But the fallout pales in comparison to the less visible long-term effects that are more sinister and dangerous....

Read more: Extreme stress in childhood is toxic to your DNA

A brief history of the s'more, America's favorite campfire snack

  • Written by Jeffrey Miller, Associate Professor and Program Coordinator, Hospitality Management, Colorado State University
So gooey, so good.Chewonki Semester School, CC BY-NC-ND

This summer, 45 million pounds of marshmallows will be toasted over a fire in America. Many will be used as an ingredient in the quintessential summer snack: the s’more.

Huddling around a campfire and eating gooey marshmallows and warm chocolate sandwiched between two graham crackers may...

Read more: A brief history of the s'more, America's favorite campfire snack

Mandatory labels with simple disclosures reduced fears of GE foods in Vermont

  • Written by Jane Kolodinsky, Professor and Chair Community Development and Applied Economics, University of Vermont
Vermont has had food labels that indicate food has been 'partially produced with genetic engineering.'Sally McCay, UVM Photo, CC BY-NC-ND

There has been substantial debate over whether mandated labels for genetically engineered foods might increase or decrease consumer aversion toward genetic engineering.

This question is particularly relevant now...

Read more: Mandatory labels with simple disclosures reduced fears of GE foods in Vermont

Crop insurance is good for farmers, but not always for the environment

  • Written by Don Fullerton, Gutsgell Professor of Finance, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Crop insurance is designed to help farmers weather disasters such as Hurricane Irma, which devastated many Florida citrus farms in 2017.AP Photo/Tamara Lush

Congress is currently debating the 2018 Farm Bill, a massive piece of legislation enacted about every five years. One of its key elements is crop insurance, which helps protect farmer income in...

Read more: Crop insurance is good for farmers, but not always for the environment

Inventing the future in Chinese labs: How does China do science today?

  • Written by Richard P. Suttmeier, Professor Emeritus of Political Science, University of Oregon
China's political system sets the course for the science in universities, government labs and industry.Vmenkov, CC BY-SA

Genetic engineering, the search for dark matter, quantum computing and communications, artificial intelligence, brain science – the list of potentially disruptive research goes on. Each has significant implications for...

Read more: Inventing the future in Chinese labs: How does China do science today?

Why is suicide on the rise in the US – but falling in most of Europe?

  • Written by Steven Stack, Professor of Criminal Justice, Wayne State University
The US suicide rate rose 30.4 percent between 1999 and 2015. hikrcn/shutterstock

Suicide now ranks in the top 10 leading causes of death in the U.S.

In 2015, 44,193 Americans died by their own hand. That was more than the number killed in motor vehicle accidents (37,757) and over twice the number who died through homicide (17,793).

The number of...

Read more: Why is suicide on the rise in the US – but falling in most of Europe?

Blockchain-based property registries may help lift poor people out of poverty

  • Written by Nir Kshetri, Professor of Management, University of North Carolina – Greensboro
Many rural farmers in India lack clear ownership of the land they work and live on.AP Photo/Anupam Nath

Many developing countries don’t have a working system of tracking property rights, and what they do have can be fragile and incomplete. In Haiti, for instance, a large earthquake in 2010 destroyed all the municipal buildings that stored...

Read more: Blockchain-based property registries may help lift poor people out of poverty

Teachers' activism will survive the Janus Supreme Court ruling

  • Written by Sherman Dorn, Professor of Education, Arizona State University
Plaintiff Mark Janus, right, speaks outside the Supreme Court AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

The Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in Janus v. AFSCME 31 will hurt public employee unions in both membership and funding.

The majority opinion, written by Associate Justice Samuel Alito, said that requiring public employees who are not union members to pay fees...

Read more: Teachers' activism will survive the Janus Supreme Court ruling

More Articles ...

  1. Janus decision extends First Amendment 'right of silence'
  2. Approval of drug derived from cannabis not necessarily a win for weed
  3. Supreme Court hands victory to pro-life crisis pregnancy centers
  4. 'We are only following the law' doesn't explain immigration policy during Nazi era or now
  5. How does your body 'burn' fat?
  6. What's leisure and what's game addiction in the 21st century?
  7. How opioid addiction alters our brains to always want more
  8. `We are only following the law' doesn't explain immigration policy during Nazi era or now
  9. US 'zero-tolerance' immigration policy still violating fundamental human rights laws
  10. Why Trump's proposal to merge the departments of Labor and Education should fail
  11. Why are Russians so stingy with their smiles?
  12. Sonic attacks: How a medical mystery can sow distrust in foreign governments
  13. Trump travel ban targeting Muslims will not make America safer
  14. Today’s US-Mexico 'border crisis' in 6 charts
  15. ¿Amnistía para traficantes? Eso propone este candidato presidencial mexicano
  16. The long history of separating families in the US and how the trauma lingers
  17. Supreme Court ruling adds privacy protection for the digital age
  18. Bitcoin price manipulation puts trust in cryptocurrencies at risk
  19. New data shows US hate crimes continued to rise in 2017
  20. A new world is dawning, and the US will no longer lead it
  21. Treating pain in children can teach us about treating pain in adults
  22. Growth mindset interventions yield impressive results
  23. Schools are buying 'growth mindset' interventions despite scant evidence that they work well
  24. Why it's time to curb widespread use of neonicotinoid pesticides
  25. For many immigrant families, the fight for reunification is just beginning
  26. Searching for diversity in Silicon Valley tech firms – and finding some
  27. The latest blood pressure guidelines: What they mean for you
  28. The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is in trouble – but the ground beneath it may buy some time
  29. How immigration court works
  30. School safety commission should not worry about violence in entertainment media
  31. Social impact bonds, explained
  32. How colleges must collaborate to lift up the communities just outside their door
  33. Helping plants remove natural toxins could boost crop yields by 47 percent
  34. How Catholic women fought against Vatican's prohibition on contraceptives
  35. Why care about undocumented immigrants? For one thing, they've become vital to key sectors of the US economy
  36. Trump's new plan to consolidate federal food safety efforts won't work. Here's why
  37. Nationalism and piety dominate Turkey's election
  38. Las bebidas light pueden perjudicar tu dieta
  39. El bombardeo de noticias falsas distorsiona la realidad en Venezuela
  40. Physical therapy could lower need for opioids, but lack of money and time are hurdles
  41. The Bezos-Buffett-Dimon health care venture: Eliminate the middlemen
  42. China cannot spend its way to soccer greatness
  43. Preventing crimes against humanity in the US
  44. The 3 stages of giving: Deference, arrogance and inquiry
  45. Making art 'should be uncomfortable' – a conversation with visual artist Lorna Simpson
  46. It's time for a new approach to travel
  47. A sudden and lasting separation from a parent can permanently alter brain development
  48. Corporate CEOs' political voice growing louder as they criticize Trump policies like separating migrant children
  49. Why our brains see the world as 'us' versus 'them'
  50. Sitting and diabetes in older adults: Does timing matter?