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Is the Supreme Court acting less like a court?

  • Written by Daniel N. Rockmore, Professor, Department of Mathematics, Computational Science, and Computer Science, Dartmouth College
imageHave the Supreme Court's rulings changed over time?UpstateNYer, CC BY-SA

As the pinnacle of the judicial branch, the U.S. Supreme Court is necessarily involved in some of the highest-profile, most controversial and most political cases across the country. And it is one of the most widely respected government institutions in the country. Some of its...

Read more: Is the Supreme Court acting less like a court?

Fishing for DNA: Free-floating eDNA identifies presence and abundance of ocean life

  • Written by Mark Stoeckle, Senior Research Associate in the Program for the Human Environment, The Rockefeller University
imageFish leave bits of DNA behind that researchers can collect.Mark Stoeckle/Diane Rome Peebles images, CC BY-ND

Ocean life is largely hidden from view. Monitoring what lives where is costly – typically requiring big boats, big nets, skilled personnel and plenty of time. An emerging technology using what’s called environmental DNA gets...

Read more: Fishing for DNA: Free-floating eDNA identifies presence and abundance of ocean life

Watching the planet breathe: Studying Earth's carbon cycle from space

  • Written by Berrien Moore III, Vice President, Weather & Climate Programs; Dean, College of Atmospheric & Geographic Sciences; Director, National Weather Center, University of Oklahoma
imageAverage carbon dioxide concentrations, Oct. 1 - Nov. 11, 2014, measured by the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 satellite.NASA

Carbon is a building block of life on our planet. It is stored in reservoirs on Earth – in rocks, plants and soil – in the oceans, and in the atmosphere. And it cycles constantly between these reservoirs.

Understand...

Read more: Watching the planet breathe: Studying Earth's carbon cycle from space

How workers – not companies – are bearing the growing burden of government

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University

Tax day is here once more, and tens of millions of Americans will rush to file their income taxes by this year’s deadline of April 18 (rather than April 15 for a variety of reasons).

Although most of us probably identify the federal income tax with the revenue that ultimately fills the goverment’s coffers and allows it to spend our...

Read more: How workers – not companies – are bearing the growing burden of government

Is there room for broadband in the Trump infrastructure agenda?

  • Written by Krishna Jayakar, Co-Director, Institute for Information Policy and Associate Professor of Telecommunications, Pennsylvania State University
imageThere's still a lot of the U.S. waiting to be wired up.asharkyu/Shutterstock.com

A promise to restore America’s crumbling infrastructure was a key part of President Donald Trump’s campaign speeches. He pledged to rebuild America’s roads and bridges, ports and highways, which are undoubtedly in need of repair. Less clear in his...

Read more: Is there room for broadband in the Trump infrastructure agenda?

Beyond instant runoff: A better way to conduct multi-candidate elections

  • Written by Christoph Borgers, Professor of Mathematics, Tufts University
imageA vote is cast in New Hampshire 2012 primary. AP Photo/Matt Rourke

Last November, Maine voters approved, by a slim majority, a ballot initiative to adopt a voting system called “instant runoff.”

This system has been proposed as an alternative to our traditional election method – called “plurality voting” – by...

Read more: Beyond instant runoff: A better way to conduct multi-candidate elections

Do Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner have too much power?

  • Written by Henry F. (Chip) Carey, Associate Professor, Political Science , Georgia State University
imageDonald and Ivanka Trump walk to board Marine One on the South Lawn of the White House, Feb. 1, 2017. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Much attention has been focused recently on President Trump’s “new” foreign policy.

This policy change is symbolized by the U.S. missile attack on Syria’s Shayrat airfield, which followed Syrian President...

Read more: Do Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner have too much power?

Building jobs in the Rust Belt: The role of education

  • Written by Dana Mitra, Professor of Education Theory and Policy, Pennsylvania State University
imageJob shadowing is one way that students can understand career options in their Rust Belt communities.U.S. Army Corps of Engineers / flickr, CC BY-SA

When my father-in-law struggled in school in a mill town along the Ohio River, his parents suggested that he head across the bridge and work in the steel mill. It was a path that once created stable...

Read more: Building jobs in the Rust Belt: The role of education

In the wake of Syrian missile strike, a look inside Russia's alternate media reality

  • Written by Cynthia Hooper, Associate Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross

On April 11 the White House released an intelligence report accusing Russia of trying to cover up the use of chemical weapons by Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad through a global disinformation campaign replete with “false narratives.”

As a professor of Soviet history with an interest in media studies, I’ve been following...

Read more: In the wake of Syrian missile strike, a look inside Russia's alternate media reality

Why Easter is called Easter, and other little-known facts about the holiday

  • Written by Brent Landau, Lecturer in Religious Studies, University of Texas at Austin
imageWhat is the origin of Easter eggs?Katie Morrow, CC BY-NC-ND

This Sunday, April 16, Christians will be celebrating Easter, the day on which the resurrection of Jesus is said to have taken place. The date of celebration changes from year to year.

The reason for this variation is that Easter always falls on the first Sunday after the first full moon...

Read more: Why Easter is called Easter, and other little-known facts about the holiday

More Articles ...

  1. How following economics 101 could have prevented United's PR nightmare
  2. How economics 101 could have prevented United's PR nightmare
  3. Will Trump's cuts inspire more DIY foreign aid?
  4. Enzymes versus nerve agents: Designing antidotes for chemical weapons
  5. An electric fix for removing long-lasting chemicals in groundwater
  6. The sound of inclusion: Why teachers' words matter
  7. Three reasons for optimism in Somalia
  8. San Francisco is using a Montana sheriff's playbook to sue Trump on sanctuary cities
  9. The key to writing a Pulitzer Prize-winning story? Get emotional
  10. Who wears the pants in a relationship matters – especially if you're a woman
  11. Maximizers vs. minimizers: The personality trait that may guide your medical decisions – and costs
  12. Using randomness to protect election integrity
  13. Melding mind and machine: How close are we?
  14. What Trump’s foreign aid cuts would mean for global democracy
  15. Are the rich more selfish than the rest of us?
  16. Why can't America just take out Assad?
  17. Strikes against Syria: Did Trump need permission from Congress?
  18. US airstrike on Syria: What next?
  19. Trump’s attack on Syria: Four takeaways
  20. The Case for Christ: What's the evidence for the resurrection?
  21. To conserve tropical forests and wildlife, protect the rights of people who rely on them
  22. US foreign aid, explained
  23. Cutting UN peacekeeping operations: What will it say about America?
  24. 'Making Europe Great Again,' Trump's online supporters shift attention to the French election
  25. DNA dating: How molecular clocks are refining human evolution's timeline
  26. During World War I, a silent film spoke volumes about freedom of speech
  27. Who is a better ally for the US – Russia or China?
  28. The face of Latin American migration is rapidly changing. US policy isn't keeping up
  29. North Korea cyberspace offensives pose challenge in US-China relations
  30. Donor-advised funds: Charities with benefits
  31. Techniques of 19th-century fake news reporter teach us why we fall for it today
  32. What's at stake as President Trump sits down with China’s Xi
  33. Yes, we can do 'sound' climate science even though it's projecting the future
  34. With new technology, mathematicians turn numbers into art
  35. Bosnia's 25-year struggle with transitional justice
  36. The unique case for rural charter schools
  37. How the Trump budget undercuts security risks posed by pandemics
  38. Facial recognition is increasingly common, but how does it work?
  39. Farmers can profit economically and politically by addressing climate change
  40. How Christianity shaped the experience and memories of World War I
  41. The unique strategy Netflix deployed to reach 90 million worldwide subscribers
  42. Ecuador's populist electoral victory for Moreno shows erosion of democracy
  43. How Ayn Rand's 'elitism' lives on in the Trump administration
  44. 1917: Woodrow Wilson's call to war pulled America onto a global stage
  45. Healthy soil is the real key to feeding the world
  46. Can better advice keep you safer online?
  47. From shell-shock to PTSD, a century of invisible war trauma
  48. How World War I ushered in the century of oil
  49. 'Default' choices have big impact, but how to make sure they’re used ethically?
  50. Can the study of epigenomics lead to personalized cancer treatment?