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More mental health care alone will not stop gun violence

  • Written by Jonathan Spiegler, PhD Student in Political Science, Michigan State University
Gun safety advocates hold signs during a rally to honor victims of gun violence on the steps of the Colorado State Capitol in Denver, 2013.AP/Brennan Linsley

Gun violence remains a highly controversial issue in the wake of school shootings in Parkland, Florida, and other communities. At such times, politicians seem compelled to offer the public...

Read more: More mental health care alone will not stop gun violence

What it means to be a Christian in America today

  • Written by Matthew Bowman, Associate Professor of History, Henderson State University
Young people hold hands for a prayer during a gathering at sunset outside the Christian Fellowship Church in Benton, Kentucky.AP Photo/David Goldman

President Donald Trump spoke recently to the Campaign for Life Gala, an annual Washington gathering of activists opposed to abortion. There he declared that Americans depend upon divine protection to...

Read more: What it means to be a Christian in America today

Schools must equip students to navigate alt-right websites that push fake news

  • Written by Jennifer Rich, Assistant Professor, Rowan University
Middle and high school students turn to alt-right websites for their research papers.Steve Heap/www.shutterstock.com

More than 60 percent of America’s middle and high school students rely on alt-right internet sites as credible sources for their research papers. The students are using alt-right sites to write papers on topics that range from...

Read more: Schools must equip students to navigate alt-right websites that push fake news

Opiate addiction and the history of pain and race in the US

  • Written by Joseph M. Gabriel, Associate Professor of History and Social Medicine, Florida State University
Pain of the sick: 'Anatomy of Expression,' by Sir Charles Bell, 1806.Wellcome Collection, CC BY

“I have had little or no sleep, owing to the tooth ache or rather stump ache,” Elizabeth Drinker wrote in her diary one night in 1796. “One of my Eye teeth very sore, my face much swelled and painful.”

Drinker, a white woman from...

Read more: Opiate addiction and the history of pain and race in the US

Colombia elects a conservative who promises to 'correct' its peace accord

  • Written by Fabio Andres Diaz, Researcher on Conflict, Peace and Development, International Institute of Social Studies

In the most peaceful election in its modern history, Colombia has elected as its next president a conservative who has promised to “correct” the country’s tenuous 2016 peace deal.

Iván Duque, of the Democratic Center party, won election on June 17 with 54 percent of the votes amid record high turnout. Duque opposes...

Read more: Colombia elects a conservative who promises to 'correct' its peace accord

Nicaraguans try to topple a dictator — again

  • Written by Benjamin Waddell, Assistant Professor of International Studies, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas
Nicaragua, which overthrew its last violent dictator in 1979, is the only Latin American country since Cuba to stage a successful revolution. AP Photo/Alfredo Zuniga

After months of near-constant protest in Nicaragua, at least 215 people are dead, 1,000 are injured, and President Daniel Ortega – an authoritarian leader who once seemed...

Read more: Nicaraguans try to topple a dictator — again

The Bible's message on separating immigrant children from parents is a lot different from what Jeff Sessions thinks

  • Written by Bharat Ranganathan, Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Notre Dame
Jeff Sessions is citing the Bible in defending the Trump administration’s immigration policy.AP Photo/Susan Walsh, File

In a speech to law enforcement officers on June 14, Attorney General Jeff Sessions cited biblical scripture Romans 13 to claim support for zero tolerance immigration policies, including the Trump administration’s...

Read more: The Bible's message on separating immigrant children from parents is a lot different from what...

Astronaut Sally K. Ride's legacy – encouraging young women to embrace science and engineering

  • Written by Bonnie J. Dunbar, NASA astronaut (Ret) and TEES Distinguished Research Professor, Aerospace Engineering, Texas A&M University
Mission specialist Sally Ride became the first American woman to fly in space. NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center

On June 18, 1983, 35 years ago, Sally Ride became the first American woman to launch into space, riding the Space Shuttle STS-7 flight with four other crew members. Only five years earlier, in 1978, she had been selected to the first...

Read more: Astronaut Sally K. Ride's legacy – encouraging young women to embrace science and engineering

What 40 years of 'Space Invaders' says about the 1970s – and today

  • Written by Lindsay Grace, Associate Professor of Communication; Director, American University Game Lab and Studio, American University School of Communication
The iconic shooting game in its original stand-up arcade form.Jordiferrer, CC BY-SA

The “Space Invaders” arcade video game, celebrating its 40th anniversary, is an iconic piece of software, credited as one of the earliest digital shooting games. Like many early games, it and its surrounding myths showcase the cultural collisions and...

Read more: What 40 years of 'Space Invaders' says about the 1970s – and today

Why a minor change to how EPA makes rules could radically reduce environmental protection

  • Written by Joseph Aldy, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Harvard University
Tighter emissions standards create costs for truck manufacturers yet provide health benefits for society. How should they be weighed?Lesterman

Since the Reagan administration, federal agencies have been required to produce cost-benefit analyses of their major regulations. These assessments are designed to ensure that regulators are pursuing actions...

Read more: Why a minor change to how EPA makes rules could radically reduce environmental protection

More Articles ...

  1. Drug shortages pose a public health crisis in the US
  2. Why you should eat popcorn with chopsticks – and other psychological tricks to make life more enjoyable
  3. As Venezuela's public health system collapses, mosquito-borne viruses re-emerge
  4. What is the summer solstice? An astronomer explains
  5. US communities can suffer long-term consequences after immigration raids
  6. Yemen: Understanding the conflict
  7. One likely winner of the World Cup? Putin
  8. Why New York state is suing the Trumps: 5 questions answered
  9. How can a baby have 3 parents?
  10. Puerto Ricans don't trust official information on Hurricane Maria
  11. Why domestic abuse and anti-gay violence qualify as persecution in asylum law
  12. How Native American food is tied to important sacred stories
  13. How recycling more steel and aluminum could slash imports without a trade war
  14. A Father's Day reminder from science: Your kids aren't really growing up quickly
  15. Mexico seeks to become 'country of refuge' as US cracks down on migrants
  16. El nuevo aeropuerto de la Ciudad de México es un desastre ambiental que podría ser un gran parque natural
  17. To avoid humans, more wildlife now work the night shift
  18. Fathers forgotten when it comes to services to help them be good parents, new study finds
  19. Why black women's experiences of #MeToo are different
  20. Suicide nation: What's behind the need to numb and to seek a final escape?
  21. Lessons on political polarization from Lincoln's 'House Divided' speech, 160 years later
  22. Four campus free speech problems solved
  23. Digital mental health drug raises troubling questions
  24. New European rules may give US internet users true privacy choices for the first time
  25. Why there are so many unsheltered homeless people on the West Coast
  26. El colapso económico de Venezuela tiene una clara explicación
  27. Short-term changes in Antarctica's ice shelves are key to predicting their long-term fate
  28. On Germany's national soccer stage, why have East Germans gone missing?
  29. En Venezuela puede que no haya un final feliz
  30. Furia en Argentina despues del juicio que da indulto a un criminal de la Guerra Sucia
  31. The US nuclear arsenal: A quick overview
  32. Climate change will make rice less nutritious, putting millions of the world's poor at risk
  33. Anthony Bourdain's window into Africa
  34. How to choose a World Cup team when the US isn't contending
  35. Some want to get rid of college majors – here's how that could go wrong
  36. Do abused women need asylum? 4 essential reads
  37. Summit with Kim is boosting Trump's confidence – that might not be a good thing
  38. Is Venezuela's president afraid of a coup d'etat?
  39. Mind molding psychedelic drugs could treat depression, and other mental illnesses
  40. Could science diplomacy be the key to stabilizing international relations?
  41. Living with neighborhood violence may shape teens' brains
  42. Why religions of the world condemn suicide
  43. Can Facebook use AI to fight online abuse?
  44. Iran's mild response to unprecedented truckers' strike could be due to Trump's influence
  45. Stress is bad for your body, but how? Studying piglets may shed light
  46. School safety commission misses the mark by ignoring guns
  47. John McCain helped build a country that no longer reflects his values
  48. Tourism to the US is in a 'Trump slump' - truth or fiction?
  49. When does hungry become hangry?
  50. Bourdain, Spade suicides show how even those at the top can know the lows of depression