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Is the Trans-Pacific Partnership dead? Seven essential reads

  • Written by Bryan Keogh, Editor, Economics and Business, The Conversation

President Obama plans to make a last-ditch push to get Congress to approve his signature Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP) trade deal by urging senators to pass it in a lame-duck session after the election. The chances of that happening appear slim at best, however. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has already indicated he won’t bring it...

Read more: Is the Trans-Pacific Partnership dead? Seven essential reads

Are US antitrust regulators giving Silicon Valley's 'free' apps a free pass?

  • Written by John Newman, Professor of Law, University of Memphis

Judging by the political winds, Silicon Valley seems headed for a showdown with antitrust regulators.

For the first time since 1988, the Democratic Party’s platform includes stronger antitrust enforcement, while leading liberals have singled out Google, Apple and Facebook for holding too much market power.

Republicans considered (but ultimately...

Read more: Are US antitrust regulators giving Silicon Valley's 'free' apps a free pass?

Curing health care with a dose of big data and common sense

  • Written by Marschall Runge, Dean, School of Medicine, University of Michigan
imageDoctors are learning new ways to help patients. From www.shuttertock.com

While commanding four vessels sailing between England and India in 1601, Captain James Lancaster performed one of the great experiments in medical history. Each of the seamen on just one ship – his own, of course – was required to sip three teaspoons of lemon juice...

Read more: Curing health care with a dose of big data and common sense

The most important dam you probably haven't heard of

  • Written by Jennifer Drake, Assistant Professor of Civil Engineering, University of Toronto

Large dams are major nation-building projects. They harness power to generate energy, provide water for large-scale irrigation and can help control flooding. And politicians often describe them as symbols of national power and technical prowess.

The early 20th century is known as the “golden age” of dam building in the United States....

Read more: The most important dam you probably haven't heard of

Why has Japan's massacre of disabled gone unnoticed? For answers, look to the past

  • Written by Rachel Adams, Professor of English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University
imageIs there an ongoing ambivalence toward people living with disabilities?James Emery, CC BY

On July 26, 2016 a man wielding a knife broke into Tsukui Yamayuriena, a home for the disabled outside of Tokyo and brutally murdered 19 people as they slept, while injuring another 26. Afterwards, he turned himself in to a local police station, with the...

Read more: Why has Japan's massacre of disabled gone unnoticed? For answers, look to the past

Guns in Donald Trump's America

  • Written by Jonathan M. Metzl, Director, Center for Medicine, Health, and Society; Professor of Sociology and Psychiatry, Vanderbilt University

Donald Trump’s new outreach to “minority voters” is already showing signs of strain.

Soon after the shooting death of Nykea Aldridge, cousin of basketball star Dwyane Wade, Trump sent a controversial tweet:

Trump’s missive drew widespread condemnation for its opportunism and insensitivity, particularly in the context of...

Read more: Guns in Donald Trump's America

Finding better ways to get hydrogen fuel from water

  • Written by Peter Byrley, Ph.D. Candidate in Chemical Engineering, University of California, Riverside
imageHydrogen fueling stations like this could become more common if materials scientists and other researchers keep pushing for new breakthroughs.fueling station photo via shutterstock.com

With hydrogen power stations in California, a new Japanese consumer car and portable hydrogen fuel cells for electronics, hydrogen as a zero emission fuel source is...

Read more: Finding better ways to get hydrogen fuel from water

A tale of two GDPs: Why Republicans and Democrats live in different economic realities

  • Written by Ian Anson, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageWhich economy do you live in?Partisan minds via www.shutterstock.com

Back in 1992, Democratic strategist James Carville uttered his famous recommendation to Bill Clinton ahead of the 1992 election: “It’s the economy, stupid!” Political scientists beat Carville to the punch, though: As far back as the 1950’s, scholars were...

Read more: A tale of two GDPs: Why Republicans and Democrats live in different economic realities

How victims of terror are remembered distorts perceptions of safety

  • Written by Richard Lachmann, Professor of Sociology, University at Albany, State University of New York

Are Americans safe from terrorism?

Forty-nine dead in Orlando, five in Dallas and three in Baton Rouge in 2016. Twelve dead in San Bernardino, three at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs and nine at a church in Charleston in 2015.

In addition, Americans watched ample news coverage of the attacks in Nice and Brussels in 2016, and two far...

Read more: How victims of terror are remembered distorts perceptions of safety

Will a merged Tesla-SolarCity put a solar-powered battery in every home?

  • Written by W. Rocky Newman, Professor of Management, Farmer School of Business, Miami University
imageThe linchpin to Tesla's proposed merger with SolarCity is the Gigafactory and whether it can lower costs and improve battery performance.Tesla Motors

One year ago Tesla Motors announced plans to build its Gigafactory to produce huge numbers of batteries, giving life to the old saying, “if you want something done right, do it yourself.”

By...

Read more: Will a merged Tesla-SolarCity put a solar-powered battery in every home?

More Articles ...

  1. Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids sold as counterfeits in deadly new trend
  2. How men benefit from family-friendly tenure policies
  3. Failed coup in Turkey means thousands are voting with their feet
  4. Scientists at work: Public archaeologists dig before the construction crews do
  5. Russia's aggressive power is resurgent, online and off
  6. Polio eradication effort challenged, but not derailed
  7. Rebuilding ground zero: How twin mandates of revival and remembrance reshaped Lower Manhattan
  8. Corporate sponsors at Yosemite? The case against privatizing national parks
  9. The real reason the EpiPen and other off-patents are so expensive
  10. David Duke, Donald Trump and the dog whistle
  11. Fracking and health: What we know from Pennsylvania's natural gas boom
  12. Could gay-straight alliances reduce school bullying?
  13. This little-known pioneering educator put coding in the classroom
  14. Understanding mosquitoes can help us find better ways to kill them
  15. Getting serious about funny: Psychologists see humor as a character strength
  16. Who dies in police custody? Texas, California offer new tools to find out
  17. What's ailing the ACA: Insurers or Congress?
  18. Why silence continues to surround pregnancy discrimination in the workplace
  19. Playing at torture, a not so trivial pursuit
  20. How the Islamic State recruits and coerces children
  21. Voter ID laws: Why black Democrats' fight for the ballot in Mississippi still matters
  22. Get better election predictions by combining diverse forecasts
  23. Harried doctors can make diagnostic errors: They need time to think
  24. How Dostoevsky predicted Trump's America
  25. Suburban sprawl and poor preparation worsened flood damage in Louisiana
  26. Louisiana's Cajun Navy shines light on growing value of boat rescuers
  27. King Coal is dethroned in the US – and that's good news for the environment
  28. Slavery on campus – recovering the history of Washington College's discarded slaves
  29. Relationship advice from the government doesn't help low-income couples – here's what might
  30. How racism has shaped welfare policy in America since 1935
  31. Big Tobacco aims its guns to kill California tobacco tax
  32. Why we're wrong to blame immigrants for our sputtering economies
  33. With skateboarding's inclusion in Tokyo 2020, a once-marginalized subculture enters the spotlight
  34. How bigotry crushed the dreams of an all-black Little League team
  35. From wine to weed: Keeping the marijuana farm small and local
  36. After the NSA hack: Cybersecurity in an even more vulnerable world
  37. Can a single region in Florida show the state how to adapt to climate change?
  38. Should writing for the public count toward tenure?
  39. What does social science say about how a female president might lead?
  40. A pregnant woman's immune response could lead to brain disorders in her kids
  41. DOJ report on Baltimore echoes centuries-old limits on African-American freedom in the Charm City
  42. How companies learn what children secretly want
  43. Algorithms can be more fair than humans
  44. Nuclear power deserves a level playing field
  45. Compete or suckle: Should troubled nuclear reactors be subsidized?
  46. Is misuse of prescription painkillers among youth athletes leading to heroin use?
  47. Why the guns-on-campus debate matters for American higher education
  48. Here's what coworkers think when you suck up to your boss
  49. Don't run (and don't laugh): The little-known history of racewalking
  50. Disasters and kids – how to help them recover