NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Just competing in March Madness is a fundraising win for the schools

  • Written by Brad Humphreys, Professor of Economics, West Virginia University
University of Pennsylvania players celebrate winning the 2018 Ivy League title as fans storm the court. AP Photo/Chris Szagola

The NCAA men’s basketball championship, better known as March Madness, raises big bucks even if the players aren’t paid.

In 2018, CBS is paying the National Collegiate Athletic Associationmore than US$800 million...

Read more: Just competing in March Madness is a fundraising win for the schools

Americans should welcome the age of unexceptionalism

  • Written by Alasdair S. Roberts, Director, School of Public Policy, University of Massachusetts Amherst
July 4th in a Dallas suburb. AP/Michael Prengler

Exceptionalism – the idea that the United States has a mission and character that separates it from other nations – is ingrained in everyday talk about American politics.

It shapes high-level discussions about foreign policy – for example, in a recent argument by a foreign affairs...

Read more: Americans should welcome the age of unexceptionalism

Why Wikipedia often overlooks stories of women in history

  • Written by Tamar Carroll, Associate Professor of History, Rochester Institute of Technology
Less than a third of biographical entries on Wikipedia are about women. aradaphotography/shutterstock.com

Movements like #MeToo are drawing increased attention to the systemic discrimination facing women in a range of professional fields, from Hollywood and journalism to banking and government.

Discrimination is also a problem on user-driven sites...

Read more: Why Wikipedia often overlooks stories of women in history

Stephen Hawking warned about the perils of artificial intelligence – yet AI gave him a voice

  • Written by Ana Santos Rutschman, Jaharis Faculty Fellow in Health Law and Intellectual Property, DePaul University
Stephen Hawking both warned about and benefited from artificial intelligence.Hoo-Me.com/MediaPunch/IPX/AP

The late Stephen Hawking was a major voice in the debate about how humanity can benefit from artificial intelligence. Hawking made no secret of his fears that thinking machines could one day take charge. He went as far as predicting that future...

Read more: Stephen Hawking warned about the perils of artificial intelligence – yet AI gave him a voice

Sustainable cities need more than parks, cafes and a riverwalk

  • Written by Trina Hamilton, Associate Professor of Geography, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Small tankers unload along New York's Newtown Creek in 2008.Jim Henderson

There are many indexes that aim to rank how green cities are. But what does it actually mean for a city to be green or sustainable?

We’ve written about what we call the “parks, cafes and a riverwalk” model of sustainability, which focuses on providing new...

Read more: Sustainable cities need more than parks, cafes and a riverwalk

Zero tolerance discipline policies won't fix school shootings

  • Written by Derek W. Black, Professor of Law, University of South Carolina
The Trump administration aims to revisit school discipline policies. Roman Bodnarchuk/Shutterstock

As outrage over the Parkland school shooting persists, lawmakers are looking for actual policy solutions. Unfortunately, they sometimes misunderstand or misuse the facts that should drive policy.

The Trump administration and its supporters are latching...

Read more: Zero tolerance discipline policies won't fix school shootings

What is a tariff? An economist explains

  • Written by Amitrajeet A. Batabyal, Arthur J. Gosnell Professor of Economics, Rochester Institute of Technology
Foreign goods wait to be unloaded at the Port of Los Angeles. AP Photo/Nick Ut

President Donald Trump recently slapped tariffs of 25 percent on imported steel and 10 percent on foreign aluminum, prompting significant concern and discussion about the wisdom of this action.

As an economist who shares some of those concerns, I believe it’s...

Read more: What is a tariff? An economist explains

Fearless leader or lame duck? Putin's certain triumph heralds fresh uncertainty

  • Written by Cynthia Hooper, Associate Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross
Russian President Vladimir Putin at a massive rally in his support n Moscow, March 3, 2018 AP/Pavel Golovkin

Long before it happened, Russia’s ruling party had already called it “the ultimate victory.”

On March 18, Russians go to the polls where they will – without doubt – re-elect President Vladimir Putin to a fourth...

Read more: Fearless leader or lame duck? Putin's certain triumph heralds fresh uncertainty

Pompeo's rise will make Mideast war more likely

  • Written by Gregory Aftandilian, Lecturer, Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University
The newly nominated secretary of state, Mike Pompeo, is a foreign policy hawk who opposes the Iran nuclear deal. Scrapping it could unleash a chain reaction of violence across the Middle East.AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

After U.S. president Donald Trump fired his secretary of state, Rex Tillerson, many analysts have focused on how this high-level...

Read more: Pompeo's rise will make Mideast war more likely

Can Haspel bring the CIA in from the cold?

  • Written by Brent Durbin, Associate Professor of Government, Smith College
Trump speaks at the CIA on Jan. 21, 2017AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

The CIA had a tough first year under President Donald Trump.

It started with the president making a brashly political speech in front of the agency’s Memorial Wall, which is hallowed ground to CIA officers. This was soon after Trump seemed to compare U.S. intelligence agencies to...

Read more: Can Haspel bring the CIA in from the cold?

More Articles ...

  1. Haspel is Trump's chance to reset his bad start with the CIA
  2. Stephen Hawking as accidental ambassador for assistive technologies
  3. In Pennsylvania's 18th, a very important, unimportant election
  4. Colombian guerrilla leader ends controversial presidential bid, giving peace a chance
  5. Controversial brain study has scientists rethinking neuron research
  6. The man responsible for making March Madness the moneymaking bonanza it is today
  7. What to expect when a college assigns students to random roommates
  8. Does cloud seeding work? Scientists watch ice crystals grow inside clouds to find out
  9. Where does the controversial finding that adult human brains don't grow new neurons leave ongoing research?
  10. What the National School Walkout says about schools and free speech
  11. Why do gun-makers get special economic protection?
  12. Could the open government movement shut the door on Freedom of Information?
  13. How Trump can avoid the setbacks that doomed North Korean nuclear talks in the past
  14. Booze and basketball: Why binge drinking increases during March Madness
  15. Why bland American beer is here to stay
  16. People are stranded in 'transit deserts' in dozens of US cities
  17. This March Madness, we're using machine learning to predict upsets
  18. DeVos and the limits of the education reform movement
  19. Potent Mexico City earthquake was a rare 'bending' quake, study finds – and it could happen again
  20. El sismo que azotó a la Ciudad de México fue 'peculiar' y podría pasar de nuevo, según estudio
  21. 10 things to know about the real St. Patrick
  22. Why mental health treatment is not an easy solution to violence
  23. Teaching students how to dissent is part of democracy
  24. Trump-Hitler comparisons too easy and ignore the murderous history
  25. Celebrating Marion Walter – and other unsung female mathematicians
  26. What is March Madness – and the nonprofit that manages the mayhem?
  27. Embroidering electronics into the next generation of 'smart' fabrics
  28. Adult human brains don't grow new neurons in hippocampus, contrary to prevailing view
  29. Is the NRA an educational organization? A lobby group? A nonprofit? A media outlet? Yes
  30. Trump meets Kim Jong Un: 5 essential reads
  31. Why child care costs more than college tuition - and how to make it more affordable
  32. There are dozens of sea snake species in the Indian and Pacific oceans, but none in the Atlantic or Caribbean. Why?
  33. Arbitration as a way out of the North Korean crisis
  34. Why child care costs more than college tuition – and how to make it more affordable
  35. Influenza's wild origins in the animals around us
  36. How to get more Americans to volunteer
  37. 100 years later, the madness of daylight saving time endures
  38. George W. Bush tried steel tariffs. It didn't work
  39. Want better sex? Try getting better sleep
  40. School shooters: What can law enforcement do to stop them?
  41. Why is sarcasm so difficult to detect in texts and emails?
  42. Why big bets on educational reform haven't fixed the US school system
  43. Let them eat carp: Fish farms are helping to fight hunger
  44. Perish not publish? New study quantifies the lack of female authors in scientific journals
  45. Very few women oversee US companies. Here's how to change that
  46. Female presidents don't always help women while in office, study in Latin America finds
  47. Why it's so important for kids to see diverse TV and movie characters
  48. Purdue-Kaplan deal blurs lines between for-profit and public colleges
  49. If polls say people want gun control, why doesn't Congress just pass it?
  50. West Virginia teachers win raise – but nation's rural teachers are still underpaid