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Why Dodd-Frank – or its repeal – won't save us from the next crippling Wall Street crash

  • Written by Jena Martin, Professor of Law, West Virginia University

Republicans appear poised to roll back Wall Street regulations passed after the 2008 financial crisis. Democrats argue doing so would be a “monumental mistake.”

It’s been framed as a typical fight over regulation. Democrats want more to protect taxpayers and investors from the next crisis; Republicans want less because it stifles...

Read more: Why Dodd-Frank – or its repeal – won't save us from the next crippling Wall Street crash

A 147-year-old dispute between church and state spills onto a school playground

  • Written by Frank S. Ravitch, Professor of Law & Walter H. Stowers Chair of Law and Religion, Michigan State University
imageWhy do so many state constitutions have provisions precluding funding for religious schools? Phil Roeder, CC BY

The United States Supreme Court recently heard oral arguments in a case from Missouri that could have a significant impact on state funding of religious schools.

The case involved a church in Missouri, the Trinity Lutheran Church, that...

Read more: A 147-year-old dispute between church and state spills onto a school playground

What was the protest group Students for a Democratic Society? Five questions answered

  • Written by Todd Gitlin, Professor of Journalism and Sociology, Columbia University
imageStudents for a Democratic Society was the largest – and arguably most successful – student activist organization in U.S. history.S.Sgt. Albert R. Simpson, Department of Defense / via Wikimedia

Editor’s note: The 2016 election brought student activism back into the spotlight. No student activist organization in U.S. history has...

Read more: What was the protest group Students for a Democratic Society? Five questions answered

Inequality is getting worse, but fewer people than ever are aware of it

  • Written by Jonathan J.B. Mijs, Assistant Professorial Research Fellow at London School of Economics and Fellow in Sociology, Harvard University
imageA snapshot of inequality in South Africa. Johnny Miller / Unequal Scenes, CC BY-SA

Inequality in America is on the rise. Income gains since the 1980s have been concentrated at the top. The top 10 percent today take home 30 percent of all income, and control over three-quarters of all wealth. We have returned to the level of income inequality that...

Read more: Inequality is getting worse, but fewer people than ever are aware of it

Why America's public media can't do its job

  • Written by Christopher Chávez, Assistant Professor of Communications, University of Oregon
imagePBS headquarters in Arlington, Virginia.melanie.phung/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

When the Trump administration released its proposed budget in March, it suggested eliminating federal funding for the Corporation of Public Broadcasting (CPB).

“Can we really continue to ask a coal miner in West Virginia or a single mom in Detroit to pay for these...

Read more: Why America's public media can't do its job

Blasphemy isn't just a problem in the Muslim world

  • Written by Steve Pinkerton, Lecturer in English, Case Western Reserve University
imageStained glass window depicting a heretic in the Cathedral of Saint Rumbold in Mechelen, Belgium.Heretic image via www.shutterstock.com

Recent weeks have brought renewed attention to the problem of blasphemy in the Muslim world.

In March, Pakistan sought Facebook’s aid in government efforts to “remove and block” blasphemous content...

Read more: Blasphemy isn't just a problem in the Muslim world

How to boil down a pile of diverse research papers into one cohesive picture

  • Written by Mohammad S. Jalali, Research Faculty, MIT Sloan School of Management
imageCan an algorithmic method for analyzing published research help zero in on reality?Sergei25/Shutterstock.com

From social to natural and applied sciences, overall scientific output has been growing worldwide – it doubles every nine years.

Traditionally, researchers solve a problem by conducting new experiments. With the ever-growing body of...

Read more: How to boil down a pile of diverse research papers into one cohesive picture

The cultural division that explains global political shocks from Brexit to Le Pen

  • Written by Michele Gelfand, Professor and Distinguished University Scholar Teacher, University of Maryland
imageMarine Le PenAP Photo/Claude Paris)

On May 7, France will choose its next president.

In the first round of voting on April 23, voters rejected candidates from the country’s established parties, lifting former investment banker Emmanuel Macron and nationalist Marine Le Pen to the runoff. The vote capped a swift rise for Le Pen’s National...

Read more: The cultural division that explains global political shocks from Brexit to Le Pen

Does ESPN have anywhere to go but down?

  • Written by Amanda Lotz, Fellow at the Peabody Media Center and Professor of Communication Studies and Screen Arts & Cultures, University of Michigan
imageESPN headquarters in Bristol, Connecticut.AP Photo/Jessica Hill

ESPN’s announcement of more layoffs marked yet another setback for the cable sports network – and it could signal the unraveling of the business model that’s underpinned sports broadcasting for decades.

In August 2015, the revelation that ESPN had lost subscribers led...

Read more: Does ESPN have anywhere to go but down?

How Trump's tax proposal could weaken faith in the system's fairness

  • Written by Gil B. Manzon Jr., Associate Professor of Accounting, Boston College

The Trump administration wants to change the way the government taxes so-called pass-through entities.

In a nutshell, the Trump proposal would dramatically lower the rates this category of filers pay. This would lead to very creative tax planning at best and outright evasion at worst, while prompting more companies to adopt this type of business...

Read more: How Trump's tax proposal could weaken faith in the system's fairness

More Articles ...

  1. Why we choose terrible passwords, and how to fix them
  2. How crossing the US-Mexico border became a crime
  3. A digital archive of slave voyages details the largest forced migration in history
  4. Can blockchain technology help poor people around the world?
  5. Too pretty to play? Stephen Curry and the light-skinned black athlete
  6. Two key takeaways from the pope's TED talk
  7. How parents can help autistic children make sense of their world
  8. The patients we do not see
  9. How Woodrow Wilson's propaganda machine changed American journalism
  10. Can charity save journalism from market failure?
  11. Is charter school fraud the next Enron?
  12. New statistical methods would let researchers deal with data in better, more robust ways
  13. Is there any way to stop ad creep?
  14. National monuments: Presidents can create them, but only Congress can undo them
  15. Trump’s offshore oil drilling push: Five essential reads
  16. Is the death penalty un-Christian?
  17. Did artists lead the way in mathematics?
  18. The changing nature of sacred spaces
  19. Is the paper industry getting greener? Five questions answered
  20. One way Trump went big league in his first 100 days
  21. Should the giving styles of the rich and famous alarm us all?
  22. Federal role in education has a long history
  23. Physics of poo: Why it takes you and an elephant the same amount of time
  24. Would Trump's tax cut be the biggest ever? Fat chance
  25. Mine wars: The struggle for coal miners' health care and pension benefits comes to a head
  26. To have impact, the People's Climate March needs to reach beyond activists
  27. 100 days of presidential threats
  28. Syria’s forgotten pluralism and why it matters today
  29. 'Anumeric' people: What happens when a language has no words for numbers?
  30. Can Bill Nye – or any other science show – really save the world?
  31. Cutting EPA budget puts babies at risk – and makes little economic sense
  32. Police around the world learn to fight global-scale cybercrime
  33. Confused about Trump's border wall?: 7 essential reads
  34. Why cuts in funding for UN, climate change research imperil fight against malaria
  35. What the Trump team should consider before axing Meals on Wheels funds
  36. For restaurants looking to boost profits, it's often about everything but the food
  37. Can we design a better fuel economy label?
  38. Does cooperating with ICE harm local police? What the research says
  39. How statistical thinking should shape the courtroom
  40. Making robots that can work with their hands
  41. Trump's fiery brand of populism gets a makeover in first 100 days
  42. Trump's brand of economic populism gets a makeover in first 100 days
  43. Surprise! Round one of the French presidential election went pretty much as expected
  44. What the Leo Frank case tells us about the dangers of fake news
  45. Scientist at work: Bio-prospecting for better enzymes
  46. More people than ever before are single – and that's a good thing
  47. Water, weather, new worlds: Cassini mission revealed Saturn's secrets
  48. Why environmental groups need more volunteers of color
  49. Defending science: How the art of rhetoric can help
  50. Theresa May's snap election gamble, explained