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How bad could Trump's Paris Agreement withdrawal be? A scientist's perspective

  • Written by Robert Kopp, Professor, Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, and Director, Coastal Climate Risk & Resilience Initiative, Rutgers University
imageThe U.S. failing to meet its Paris commitment would cause about $100 billion of damage to the global economy.Cammie Czuchnicki/shutterstcok.com

Even before the Paris Agreement was signed in December 2015, market forces and policy measures were starting to tilt the world toward a lower-carbon future. U.S. carbon dioxide emissions peaked in 2007, and...

Read more: How bad could Trump's Paris Agreement withdrawal be? A scientist's perspective

Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris accord cedes global leadership to China

  • Written by Wanyun Shao, Assistant Professor of Geography, Auburn University
imageSolar generation in Golmud, China.Vinaykumar8687/Wikipedia, CC BY-SA

President Trump has made clear through executive orders and appointments that he does not care much about climate change in particular or environmental protection in general. Trump’s announcement that the United States will withdraw from the Paris climate agreement shows...

Read more: Trump's decision to withdraw from the Paris accord cedes global leadership to China

Why Trump's decision to leave Paris accord hurts the US and the world

  • Written by Travis N. Rieder, Research Scholar at the Berman Institute of Bioethics, Johns Hopkins University

Editor’s note: President Donald Trump stunned the world on June 1 by announcing his intention to withdraw the United States from the Paris climate accord, a landmark global agreement to lower greenhouse gas emissions and minimize the harm from climate change. We’ve assembled a panel of academics and scientists to analyze what this...

Read more: Why Trump's decision to leave Paris accord hurts the US and the world

LIGO detects more gravitational waves, from even more ancient and distant black hole collisions

  • Written by Sean McWilliams, Assistant Professor of Physics and Astronomy, West Virginia University
imageArtist's conception of two merging black holes, spinning in a nonaligned fashion.LIGO/Caltech/MIT/Sonoma State (Aurore Simonnet), CC BY-ND

For the third time in a year and a half, the Advanced Laser Interferometer Gravitational Wave Observatory has detected gravitational waves. Hypothesized by Einstein a century ago, the identification of these...

Read more: LIGO detects more gravitational waves, from even more ancient and distant black hole collisions

Cutting Superfund’s budget will slow toxic waste cleanups, threatening public health and property values

  • Written by Katherine Kiel, Professor of Economics, College of the Holy Cross
imageCleanup at the GE Housatonic Superfund site in Pittsfield, Massachusetts, 2007. Years of PCB and industrial chemical use at GE's Pittsfield facility and improper disposal led to extensive contamination around the town and down the entire length of the Housatonic River.USACE/Flickr, CC BY-ND

Next year will mark the 40th anniversary of the Love Canal...

Read more: Cutting Superfund’s budget will slow toxic waste cleanups, threatening public health and property...

Why Jefferson's vision of American Islam matters today

  • Written by Denise A. Spellberg, Professor of History and Middle Eastern Studies, University of Texas at Austin
imageThe Thomas Jefferson memorial in Washington, DC.Gage Skidmore, CC BY-SA

An estimated 3.3 million American Muslims are celebrating the month of Ramadan. It was during this month that Prophet Mohammad first received revelations from God.

The holiday has been celebratedat the White House with American Muslims since 1996, when First Lady Hillary...

Read more: Why Jefferson's vision of American Islam matters today

How yoga is helping girls heal from trauma

  • Written by Rebecca Epstein, Executive Director, Georgetown Law Center on Poverty and Inequality, Georgetown University
imagePhoto copyright TheArtOfYogaProject.

Rocsana Enriquez started thinking about yoga again when she was pregnant. She was 19 and in an abusive relationship.

When she was younger, Rocsana, whom I interviewed as part of my research, had taken part in a yoga program in a San Francisco Bay Area juvenile hall run by The Art of Yoga Project. She began...

Read more: How yoga is helping girls heal from trauma

Private defense companies are here to stay – what does that mean for national security?

  • Written by Charles Mahoney, Professor of Political Science, California State University, Long Beach

Share prices of many military and intelligence contractors have risen sharply since President Donald Trump’s election.

Investors are betting that an increase in defense spending will provide a windfall for these firms. For instance, General Dynamics, a large contractor that develops combat vehicles and weapons systems for the U.S. military,...

Read more: Private defense companies are here to stay – what does that mean for national security?

The demographics of the #resistance

  • Written by Dana R. Fisher, Professor of Sociology and Director of Program for Society and the Environment, University of Maryland
imageNinety percent of the protesters at the Women's March on Washington voted for Hillary Clinton.Liz Lemon/Flickr

Since the inauguration of Donald Trump, hundreds of thousands of people have marched on Washington, D.C. – sometimes, repeatedly.

Two more big protests are scheduled for June: the March for Truth and the National Pride March.

The...

Read more: The demographics of the #resistance

Mainstream media outlets are dropping the ball with terrorism coverage

  • Written by Philip Seib, Professor of Journalism and Public Diplomacy, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
imageBreathless reporting accompanies each attack, with little time spent addressing the underlying causes.Nick Lehr/The Conversation via Google, CC BY-SA

News coverage of the Manchester terrorist attack was sadly familiar: cellphone videos of screaming victims; details of first responders’ hectic efforts; “Was it terrorism?”...

Read more: Mainstream media outlets are dropping the ball with terrorism coverage

More Articles ...

  1. CRISPR controversy raises questions about gene-editing technique
  2. Are esports the next major league sport?
  3. Does national service help heal America’s divisions?
  4. What rural, coastal Puerto Ricans can teach us about thriving in times of crisis
  5. Why stable relationships are 'poison control' in fighting trauma and stress in kids
  6. Saving Javan rhinos from extinction starts with counting them – and it's not easy
  7. How families with 2 dads raise their kids
  8. How Trump's harsh education cuts undermine his economic growth goals
  9. Some graduation gifts really are better than others
  10. Research transparency: 5 questions about open science answered
  11. 7 in 10 smartphone apps share your data with third-party services
  12. America's mass incarceration problem in 5 charts – or, why Sessions shouldn't bring back mandatory minimums
  13. The steps that can help adults heal from childhood trauma
  14. Why killing coyotes doesn't make livestock safer
  15. The US and Mexico: Education and understanding
  16. The rising homegrown terror threat on the right
  17. When Trump met NATO: Blunt talk and meaningful silences
  18. Poor and middle-income families need a better way than 529s to save for college
  19. How would engineers build the Golden Gate Bridge today?
  20. Homeless vets with families: An untold part of veterans' struggles
  21. Diplomat in chief: How did Trump do on his first Middle East visit?
  22. Why Montana just elected Greg Gianforte, a man charged with assault, to Congress
  23. Why a monthly period is especially hard for millions of women and girls around the world
  24. When image trumps ideology: How JFK created the template for the modern presidency
  25. Trump says the IRS regulates churches too much. Here's why he's wrong
  26. Designing games that change perceptions, opinions and even players' real-life actions
  27. How do the chemicals in sunscreen protect our skin from damage?
  28. The song that had one British politician wishing for the Sex Pistols' 'sudden death'
  29. JFK at 100: Why we still cherish his memory
  30. Brazil plunges once more into political crisis, jeopardizing economic recovery
  31. Beyond the CBO score: How Trump Budget and the AHCA are dismantling America's safety net
  32. Iraq and Afghanistan: The US$6 trillion bill for America's longest war is unpaid
  33. Scientists at work: Forecasting the Atlantic hurricane season
  34. America's worsening global reputation could put billions in US exports at risk
  35. Building resilience early in life can help children cope with trauma
  36. What veterans' poems can teach us about healing on Memorial Day
  37. If Israeli lawmakers demote the Arabic language, then what?
  38. Military-funded prosthetic technologies benefit more than just veterans
  39. Why it was once unthinkable for the president to be seen with the pope
  40. How Google Street View became fertile ground for artists
  41. The Islamic State group has weaponized children
  42. How social ties make us resilient to trauma
  43. How childhood trauma can affect mental and physical health into adulthood
  44. How Trump and Tom Price can kill Obamacare without the Senate
  45. Getting ready for hurricane season: 6 essential reads
  46. What is the Shia-Sunni divide?
  47. Neuromechanics of flamingos' amazing feats of balance
  48. Helping military service members complete college
  49. Trump budget would abandon public education for private choice
  50. Trump's Saudi Arabia speech confirms massive shift in US foreign policy