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An editor and his newspaper helped build white supremacy in Georgia

  • Written by Kathy Roberts Forde, Associate Professor, Journalism Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Henry W. Grady coined the phrase the ‘New South.’C.W. Mates/Library of Congress

The press is an essential guardrail of democracy. As The Washington Post tells its readers, “Democracy Dies in Darkness.”

But the press has not always been a champion of democracy.

In the late 19th century, Henry W. Grady, one of the...

Read more: An editor and his newspaper helped build white supremacy in Georgia

How far should organizations be able to go to defend against cyberattacks?

  • Written by Scott Shackelford, Associate Professor of Business Law and Ethics; Director, Ostrom Workshop Program on Cybersecurity and Internet Governance; Cybersecurity Program Chair, IU-Bloomington, Indiana University
Who's really on the other side?Yakobchuk Viacheslav/Shutterstock.com

The deluge of cyberattacks sweeping across the world has governments and companies thinking about new ways to protect their digital systems, and the corporate and state secrets stored within. For a long time, cybersecurity experts have erected firewalls to keep out unwanted...

Read more: How far should organizations be able to go to defend against cyberattacks?

Adolescents have a fundamental need to contribute

  • Written by Andrew J. Fuligni, Professor of Psychiatry & Psychology, University of California, Los Angeles
Harnessing adolescents’ readiness to help can be good for them and their communities.YAKOBCHUK VIACHESLAV/Shutterstock.com

No longer children but not yet adults, adolescents need opportunities to learn and prepare for their entrance into the broader society. But, as schooling increasingly extends the adolescent period and teenagers get...

Read more: Adolescents have a fundamental need to contribute

How slavery's lingering stain on the US Constitution spoils Elizabeth Warren's wealth tax proposal – for now

  • Written by Beverly Moran, Professor of Law and Sociology, Vanderbilt University
Slavery was a sticking point at the Constitutional Convention of 1787.Howard Chandler Christy/The Indian Reporter, CC BY

Key Democrats are proposing ways to make the rich pay more taxes.

I believe one of the most promising is Sen. Elizabeth Warren’s wealth tax. There’s only one snag: It is arguablyunconstitutional.

Under her proposal,...

Read more: How slavery's lingering stain on the US Constitution spoils Elizabeth Warren's wealth tax proposal...

Why the $22 trillion national debt doesn't matter – here's what you should worry about instead

  • Written by William D. Lastrapes, Professor of Economics, University of Georgia
Does a few more trillion make a difference?AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

The U.S. federal government’s debt load hit another milestone this month: It’s now a record US$22 trillion in nominal terms.

That’s $67,000 for every man, woman and child living in the U.S., and it’s up $2 trillion since President Donald Trump took...

Read more: Why the $22 trillion national debt doesn't matter – here's what you should worry about instead

Just what are 'zero tolerance' policies – and are they still common in America's schools?

  • Written by F. Chris Curran, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Zero tolerance polices in school discipline are on the decline, new data show.wavebreakmedia/www.shutterstock.com

When parents and educators discuss school discipline, one of the things that comes up most are “zero tolerance” policies. This term is often misused and misunderstood, according to new research I published recently.

Zero...

Read more: Just what are 'zero tolerance' policies – and are they still common in America's schools?

How energy efficiency delivers green dividends in red and blue states

  • Written by David Cash, Dean, John W. McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston
Installing smart meters saves energy and creates jobs.AP Photo/Gerry Broome

The Green New Deal, a bundle of proposed policies that would combat climate change, create green jobs and address economic inequities, is eliciting the usual partisan debate over what to do about global warming.

But one humble and noncontroversial way to reduce carbon...

Read more: How energy efficiency delivers green dividends in red and blue states

Why blackface?

  • Written by Michael Millner, Associate Professor of English and American Studies, University of Massachusetts Lowell
1899 lithograph of white minstrel performer Carroll Johnson depicted in blackface, right.Library of Congress

Blackface is part of American culture’s DNA.

But America has forgotten that.

For almost two weeks, conflict has raged over the use of blackface by two current Virginia politicians when they were younger. The revelations have threatened...

Read more: Why blackface?

Why it's so difficult for scientists to predict the next outbreak of a dangerous disease

  • Written by C. Brandon Ogbunu, Assistant Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, Brown University
_Aedes aegypti_ mosquitoes, responsible for transmitting Zika.AP Photo/Felipe Dana

A two-year-old boy in rural Guinea died of Ebola in December 2014. Over the next two years, almost 30,000 people in West Africa would be infected with the Ebola virus.

Why, unlike previous 17 Ebola outbreaks, did this one grow so large, so quickly? What, if anything,...

Read more: Why it's so difficult for scientists to predict the next outbreak of a dangerous disease

To end the HIV epidemic, addressing poverty and inequities one of most important treatments

  • Written by Maria De Jesus, Associate Professor, American University and Research Fellow at Center on Health, Risk, and Society, American University School of International Service
Homelessness is a major driver of HIV/AIDS.Andrew Marcus/Shutterstock.com

In his State of the Union speech, President Trump called for ending the HIV epidemic in the United States within 10 years. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar and senior public health officials stated that the government plans to focus on highly impacted areas and...

Read more: To end the HIV epidemic, addressing poverty and inequities one of most important treatments

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