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Is the US immigration court system broken?

  • Written by Lindsay M. Harris, Assistant Professor of Law, University of the District of Columbia

In the U.S. today, a single immigration case takes an average of 677 days simply to get to the initial scheduling hearing.

There are more than half a million cases in the system, and just over 300 judges working on them. The Trump administration’s push to aggressively enforce immigration laws will make this backlog worse.

Since 2002, funding...

Read more: Is the US immigration court system broken?

Turkish referendum grants more power to Erdogan: Democracy no more?

  • Written by Doga Ulas Eralp, Professorial Lecturer, American University School of International Service

Turkey’s April 16 referendum will be long remembered as a turning point in the country’s political history.

Turks were asked to grant additional executive powers to President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, bringing an end to the separation of powers. The 18 proposed constitutional amendments grant the Turkish president sweeping authority over...

Read more: Turkish referendum grants more power to Erdogan: Democracy no more?

Will we reverse the little progress we've made on environmental justice?

  • Written by David Konisky, Associate Professor, Indiana University, Bloomington
imageThe Flint water crisis was one of the few cases of environment-related social injustices that reached national attention in recent years. AP Photo/Andrew Harnik

The Flint water crisis was perhaps the most high-profile example of the social inequalities tied to environmental issues. But it is hardly the first.

There is ample evidence that hazardous...

Read more: Will we reverse the little progress we've made on environmental justice?

Tax credits, school choice and 'neovouchers': What you need to know

  • Written by Kevin Welner, Professor, Education Policy & Law; Director, National Education Policy Center, University of Colorado
imageShould taxpayer dollars fund private education?Monkey Business Images / Shutterstock.com

As Republican lawmakers craft a tax reform bill, there’s speculation on the import taxes, value-added taxes and tax cuts it may usher in. Meanwhile, it’s likely that the bill will also include a major education policy initiative from the Trump...

Read more: Tax credits, school choice and 'neovouchers': What you need to know

Make our soil great again

  • Written by David R. Montgomery, Professor of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington
imageHealthy soil from an Oregon farm. Aaron Roth, NRCS/Flickr, CC BY-ND

Most of us don’t think much about soil, let alone its health. But as Earth Day approaches, it’s time to recommend some skin care for Mother Nature. Restoring soil fertility is one of humanity’s best options for making progress on three daunting challenges: Feeding...

Read more: Make our soil great again

How much power can an image actually wield?

  • Written by Nicole Smith Dahmen, Assistant Professor of Visual Communication, School of Journalism and Communication, University of Oregon

Conventional wisdom maintains that images hold “power” to sway public opinion, to move us to action and to ultimately “change history.”

In early April, gut-wrenching images seem to have once again awakened the world to the human atrocities happening in Syria. Following a chemical bomb attack in the town of Khan Sheikhoun, gra...

Read more: How much power can an image actually wield?

Are there too many music festivals?

  • Written by Jonathan Wynn, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Massachusetts Amherst

Coachella unofficially kicks off the 2017 U.S. festival season on April 15, and while this year’s event in Indio, California will likely set attendance records, there are concerning trends in the live music industry.

Tennessee’s massive Bonnaroo attracted 38 percent fewer attendees in 2016 than the year prior. And even in...

Read more: Are there too many music festivals?

Bible classes in schools can lead to strife among neighbors

  • Written by Frank S. Ravitch, Professor of Law & Walter H. Stowers Chair of Law and Religion, Michigan State University
imageA Bible study group for school students in Oklahoma.AP Photo/Brandi Simons

A federal lawsuit was filed recently against the Mercer County, West Virginia Board of Education, challenging a Bible program in the elementary schools. The plaintiffs are the Freedom From Religion Foundation and two parents and their children. One parent and both children...

Read more: Bible classes in schools can lead to strife among neighbors

How social media turned United's PR flub into a firestorm

  • Written by Anjana Susarla, Associate Professor of Information Systems, Michigan State University

Recent PR stumbles by United Airlines and Uber illustrate the challenges for businesses in an age when citizen activism is amplified by social media. Incidents that not so long ago would have been relatively isolated are inflaming public sentiment at a breathtaking pace, catching companies wrong-footed and significantly raising the stakes of such...

Read more: How social media turned United's PR flub into a firestorm

Why addressing loneliness in children can prevent a lifetime of loneliness in adults

  • Written by Elizabeth Tillinghast, Assistant Professor of Clinical Psychiatry Columbia College of Physicians & Surgeons; Faculty Member, Columbia Center for Psychoanalytic Training and Research, Columbia University Medical Center
imageLoneliness in adults is often a result of loneliness in childhood. From www.shutterstock.com

The Republicans’ controversial effort to repeal the perhaps optimistically named Affordable Care Act because of rising premiums may be fatally stalled. But there are other ways to rein in health care costs that have been almost entirely overlooked....

Read more: Why addressing loneliness in children can prevent a lifetime of loneliness in adults

More Articles ...

  1. Six questions about the French elections
  2. Why you may be paying more income tax than you should
  3. In planned EPA cuts, US to lose vital connection to at-risk communities
  4. Fracking comes to the Arctic in a new Alaska oil boom
  5. Venezuela has lost its democratic facade
  6. Is temptation such a bad thing?
  7. Don't believe everything you hear about pesticides on fruits and vegetables
  8. Large-scale fracking comes to the Arctic in a new Alaska oil boom
  9. Is the Supreme Court acting less like a court?
  10. Fishing for DNA: Free-floating eDNA identifies presence and abundance of ocean life
  11. Watching the planet breathe: Studying Earth's carbon cycle from space
  12. How workers – not companies – are bearing the growing burden of government
  13. Is there room for broadband in the Trump infrastructure agenda?
  14. Beyond instant runoff: A better way to conduct multi-candidate elections
  15. Do Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner have too much power?
  16. Building jobs in the Rust Belt: The role of education
  17. In the wake of Syrian missile strike, a look inside Russia's alternate media reality
  18. Why Easter is called Easter, and other little-known facts about the holiday
  19. How following economics 101 could have prevented United's PR nightmare
  20. How economics 101 could have prevented United's PR nightmare
  21. Will Trump's cuts inspire more DIY foreign aid?
  22. Enzymes versus nerve agents: Designing antidotes for chemical weapons
  23. An electric fix for removing long-lasting chemicals in groundwater
  24. The sound of inclusion: Why teachers' words matter
  25. Three reasons for optimism in Somalia
  26. San Francisco is using a Montana sheriff's playbook to sue Trump on sanctuary cities
  27. The key to writing a Pulitzer Prize-winning story? Get emotional
  28. Who wears the pants in a relationship matters – especially if you're a woman
  29. Maximizers vs. minimizers: The personality trait that may guide your medical decisions – and costs
  30. Using randomness to protect election integrity
  31. Melding mind and machine: How close are we?
  32. What Trump’s foreign aid cuts would mean for global democracy
  33. Are the rich more selfish than the rest of us?
  34. Why can't America just take out Assad?
  35. Strikes against Syria: Did Trump need permission from Congress?
  36. US airstrike on Syria: What next?
  37. Trump’s attack on Syria: Four takeaways
  38. The Case for Christ: What's the evidence for the resurrection?
  39. To conserve tropical forests and wildlife, protect the rights of people who rely on them
  40. US foreign aid, explained
  41. Cutting UN peacekeeping operations: What will it say about America?
  42. 'Making Europe Great Again,' Trump's online supporters shift attention to the French election
  43. DNA dating: How molecular clocks are refining human evolution's timeline
  44. During World War I, a silent film spoke volumes about freedom of speech
  45. Who is a better ally for the US – Russia or China?
  46. The face of Latin American migration is rapidly changing. US policy isn't keeping up
  47. North Korea cyberspace offensives pose challenge in US-China relations
  48. Donor-advised funds: Charities with benefits
  49. Techniques of 19th-century fake news reporter teach us why we fall for it today
  50. What's at stake as President Trump sits down with China’s Xi