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License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety

  • Written by Keith Guzik, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Colorado Denver

In the midst of the Senate’s failure to agree on measures designed to tighten controls around the sales of firearms, a new idea is emerging.

Last week, U.S. Representative Jim Hines, a Democrat from Connecticut, appeared on “The Daily Show With Trevor Noah” and said, “we ought to probably test people and make sure there is...

Read more: License and registration, please: how regulating guns like cars could improve safety

Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data

  • Written by Olivia Walch, Ph.D. Candidate in Applied and Interdisciplinary Mathematics, University of Michigan
imageOpening up mobile apps' data to scholarly researchers.Mobile phone and binary via shutterstock.com

There’s a transaction that happens every time you load a website, send an email, or click “like” on a friend’s post: You get something you want in exchange for some data about your actions and interests. Entire business models...

Read more: Bartering for science: using mobile apps to get research data

The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom

  • Written by John Rennie Short, Professor, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

A majority in the U.K. voted to leave the EU. But a look at the geography of the vote provides another angle on the result and insights into the political geography of the Disunited Kingdom.

The vote laid bare a seldom-acknowledged political and economic imbalance within the country. It has also raised the chances of dissolving a more than three...

Read more: The geography of Brexit: what the vote reveals about the Disunited Kingdom

Supreme Court immigration confusion? Blame the U.S. Senate

  • Written by Mark Kende, Professor of Law, Drake University

The U.S. Supreme Court has split 4-4 on whether President Obama’s immigration plan to assist the undocumented parents of certain children who are here legally is allowed.

That means the 135-page lower court ruling Texas v. United States of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, which invalidated the Obama plan, remains the law.

Most...

Read more: Supreme Court immigration confusion? Blame the U.S. Senate

Why the GM food labeling debate is not over

  • Written by Jane Kolodinsky, Professor and Chair Community Development and Applied Economics, University of Vermont

The U.S. Senate this week reached a compromise to require food manufacturers to label foods that contain genetically modified (GM) ingredients, a bill that would preempt state-level laws. The deal comes only one week before Vermont’s law to require GM food labeling will go into effect. If the Senate compromise bill is voted on and passed by...

Read more: Why the GM food labeling debate is not over

Is it ethical to purchase human organs?

  • Written by Samuel Kerstein, Professor of Philosophy, University of Maryland
imageKidneys for donation are in short supply, via Shutterstock.From www.shuttertock.com

Organ transplantation saves lives. People with end-stage kidney disease who receive a transplant tend to live much longer than those who undergo dialysis. A kidney from a living donor will last from 12 to 20 years, on average, compared to eight to 12 years for a...

Read more: Is it ethical to purchase human organs?

Deadlocked: what a nine-word decision means for five million undocumented immigrants

  • Written by Shana Tabak, Visiting Assistant Professor of Law, Georgia State University

Yesterday, the Supreme Court deadlocked on U.S. v. Texas, the most important immigration case of the year.

Nearly five million people stood to benefit from President Obama’s ambitious policy. It would have delayed deportation of unauthorized immigrants whose children are citizens or legal residents, and whose clean records made them low...

Read more: Deadlocked: what a nine-word decision means for five million undocumented immigrants

What explains Britain's Brexit shocker?

  • Written by Barry Eichengreen, Professor of Economics and Political Science, University of California, Berkeley

The result of the U.K. referendum on European Union membership has been a surprise and massive shock to so-called “expert” opinion.

And not just to academic opinion: The betting markets, which are supposed to be inhabited by experts at setting odds, were assigning just a one-in-seven probability to a majority for “leave” on...

Read more: What explains Britain's Brexit shocker?

What consumers want in GM food labeling is simpler than you think

  • Written by Katherine McComas, Professor of Communication, Cornell University
imageSocial research shows that consumers want a say in GM food labeling. ctsenatedems/flickr, CC BY-NC

The fast-approaching July 1, 2016, deadline for Vermont’s new labeling law – and a new federal proposal that would set a national system for disclosure – for genetically modified (GM) food has provoked a range of responses from food...

Read more: What consumers want in GM food labeling is simpler than you think

Eliminating inequalities needs affirmative action

  • Written by Richard J. Reddick, Associate Professor in Educational Administration, University of Texas at Austin

The Supreme Court has upheld the affirmative action admission policy of University of Texas. Abigail Fisher, a white woman, applied to the University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin) in 2008. She sued the university after she was denied admission on the grounds that the university’s race-conscious admissions policy, violated the equal...

Read more: Eliminating inequalities needs affirmative action

More Articles ...

  1. Why bad news for one Muslim American is bad news for all Muslims
  2. Britain exits the EU: how Brexit will hit America
  3. Does eating bamboo make it harder for pandas to reproduce?
  4. Will the new toxic chemical safety law protect us?
  5. After Supreme Court’s Fisher decision: what we need to know about considering race in admissions
  6. How the 2016 presidential election will shape American identity
  7. Trump's energy plan poses climate threat to U.S. economy
  8. How community schools can beat summer learning loss for low-income students
  9. Trump's dog whistle: the white, screwed-over sports icon
  10. Hate crimes against LGBTQ people are a public health issue
  11. Is Panama on the verge of a scientific brain drain?
  12. Why progressives should rescue the TPP trade deal
  13. How risky are the World Economic Forum’s top 10 emerging technologies for 2016?
  14. Can we harness bacteria to help clean up future oil spills?
  15. What summertime means for black children
  16. Is there a link between being in the closet and being homophobic?
  17. Why stress is more likely to cause depression in men than in women
  18. Will Donald Trump's call to profile Muslims offend voters?
  19. Buying and selling hacked passwords: How does it work?
  20. Love it or leave it: why the UK's Brexit vote should matter to Americans
  21. Would Brexit be followed by breakup of the United Kingdom?
  22. Sandy Hook lawsuit is latest effort to hold gun makers liable for mass shootings
  23. 2016: the proving ground for political data
  24. To fight antibiotic resistance, we need to fight bad prescribing habits
  25. Expand the draft to women – or repeal it? A long constitutional debate continues
  26. Of bears and biases: scientific judgment and the fate of Yellowstone's grizzlies
  27. Love it or leave it: why the U.K.'s Brexit vote should matter to Americans
  28. Why the first Olympic refugee team may not be the last
  29. Big data jobs are out there – are you ready?
  30. An epidemic of children dying in hot cars: a tragedy that can be prevented
  31. Should ethics professors observe higher standards of behavior?
  32. Cracking the mystery of the 'Worldwide Hum'
  33. Brexit backers claim U.K. is drowning in EU regulations – are Americans underwater too?
  34. American Medical Association warns of health and safety problems from 'white' LED streetlights
  35. Low testosterone may make you a better father
  36. Is technology making us dumber or smarter? Yes
  37. How the Supreme Court decision on United States v. Texas will affect millions of families
  38. Chemical regulation bill clears Congress, but will it protect the public?
  39. Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party?
  40. Why schools should provide one laptop per child
  41. Fentanyl: widely used, deadly when abused
  42. What we can learn from an Indonesian ethnicity that recognizes five genders
  43. Disrupting pro-ISIS online 'ecosystems' could help thwart real-world terrorism
  44. Appeals court upholds net neutrality rules -- why you should care
  45. Orlando after tragedy: much more than world's theme park
  46. Losing control: The dangers of killer robots
  47. How will we remember black women on the anniversary of the Charleston shooting?
  48. Stanford sexual assault: what changed with the survivor's testimony
  49. Where does anti-LGBT bias come from – and how does it translate into violence?
  50. Why it's so hard for students to have their debts forgiven