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Why do some countries disapprove of homosexuality? Money, democracy and religion

  • Written by Amy Adamczyk, Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice, City University of New York
imageGay pride – but not everywhere. bensonkua/flickr, CC BY-SA

With Trump’s removal of federal protections for transgender students, debate over LGBTQ rights rage again across the U.S.

Despite these disagreements, Americans are relatively liberal compared to countries across the world, where the consequences for gay or transgender citizens...

Read more: Why do some countries disapprove of homosexuality? Money, democracy and religion

How to talk climate change across the aisle: Focus on adaptive solutions rather than causes

  • Written by Thomas Bateman, Professor of Management, University of Virginia
imageWill talk of adapting to climate change be less polarizing politically? Faced with rising seas, Miami is adapting by raising its roads. AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

Conversations about climate change often derail into arguments about whether global warming exists, whether climate change is already happening, the extent to which human activity is a cause...

Read more: How to talk climate change across the aisle: Focus on adaptive solutions rather than causes

Does empathy have limits? Depends on whom you ask

  • Written by C. Daryl Cameron, Assistant Professor of Psychology and Research Associate in the Rock Ethics Institute, Pennsylvania State University
imageWhy do we lack empathy in certain situations?PROFrancisco Schmidt, CC BY-NC

Is it possible to run out of empathy?

That’s the question many are asking in the wake of the U.S. presidential election. Thousands have marched on streets and airports to encourage others to expand their empathy for women, minorities and refugees. Others have argued...

Read more: Does empathy have limits? Depends on whom you ask

Can Ben Carson use the power of HUD to make America happier?

  • Written by Justin Hollander, Associate Professor of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning, Tufts University
imageBen Carson laughs, Jan. 12, 2017. AP Photo/Zach Gibson

With the full Senate scheduled to vote on Ben Carson’s nomination to lead the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, it is worth considering one question that must be on Carson’s mind: Is HUD working?

There can be no question that HUD has enormous impact. With an annual...

Read more: Can Ben Carson use the power of HUD to make America happier?

Trump's address to Congress: Expert reaction

  • Written by Jordan Tama, Assistant Professor of International Relations, American University School of International Service

Editor’s note: President Donald Trump gave his first address to a joint session of Congress on Feb. 28. The speech featured policy ideas that appealed to Republicans, and others that sounded more Democratic. We asked scholars to react to the substance of the speech and evaluate its tone for hints of bipartisanship.

Is there any hope for...

Read more: Trump's address to Congress: Expert reaction

Edible marijuana: What we need to know

  • Written by Margie Skeer, Assistant Professor of Public Health and Community Medicine, Tufts University
imageSmaller-dose pot-infused brownies are divided and packaged at The Growing Kitchen in Boulder, Co. AP Photo/Brennan Linsley

Marijuana-infused foods – often called edibles – are becoming more and more popular in states such as Colorado, where recreational marijuana is sold.

In the first quarter of 2014, the first year recreational sales...

Read more: Edible marijuana: What we need to know

Dealing with hate: Can America's truth and reconciliation commissions help?

  • Written by Joshua F.J. Inwood, Associate Professor of Geography Senior Research Associate in the Rock Ethics Institute, Pennsylvania State University

Recent vandalism in Jewish cemeteries in St. Louis and Philadelphia illustrates the all too real problem of hate crime faced by many communities in the United States.

Just this February, the Southern Poverty Law Center found that for the second year in a row the number of hate groups in the United States has been growing – up from 892 in 2015...

Read more: Dealing with hate: Can America's truth and reconciliation commissions help?

Japan's gender-bending history

  • Written by Jennifer Robertson, Professor of Anthropology and Art History, University of Michigan
imageGenking, a male-born Japanese TV personality and 'genderless' pioneer. _genking_/Instagram

I’m an anthropologist who grew up in Japan and has lived there, off and on, for 22 years. Yet every visit to Tokyo’s Harajuku District still surprises me. In the eye-catching styles modeled by fashion-conscious young adults, there’s a...

Read more: Japan's gender-bending history

Reprintable paper becomes a reality

  • Written by Yadong Yin, Professor of Chemistry, University of California, Riverside
imageAchievement unlocked: Rewritable paper.Yadong Yin, CC BY-ND

Since its invention around 100 B.C. in China, paper as a material for spreading information has greatly contributed to the development and spread of civilization. Even in today’s information age, with electronic media omnipresent in homes, offices and even our pockets, paper still...

Read more: Reprintable paper becomes a reality

Donald Trump and Andrew Jackson: More in common than just populism

  • Written by Billy J. Stratton, Professor of contemporary American literature and culture; Native American studies, University of Denver

At President Donald Trump’s request, a portrait of former President Andrew Jackson now hangs in the Oval Office. Commentators have cast Trump’s populist appeal and inaugural address as “Jacksonian,” while others have tried to emphasize their major differences. One writer lauded Jackson as “the president who, more than...

Read more: Donald Trump and Andrew Jackson: More in common than just populism

More Articles ...

  1. Culling sharks won't protect surfers
  2. How the NEA's measly millions keep America's museums alive
  3. America has not always been as welcoming to refugees as we think
  4. Do you know what the Affordable Care Act does? Here's a primer to help
  5. Can the black press stay relevant?
  6. The Democratic Party is facing a demographic crisis
  7. Why farmers and ranchers think the EPA Clean Water Rule goes too far
  8. Why mass deportations are costly and hurt the economy
  9. Why mass deportations are costly and hurt the economy
  10. Who are the Sufis and why does ISIS see them as threatening?
  11. Who are the Sufis and why does ISIS see them as threatening?
  12. Safe and ethical ways to edit the human genome
  13. Air pollution exposure may increase risk of dementia
  14. Air pollution exposure may increase risk of dementia
  15. America's mass deportation system is rooted in racism
  16. America's mass deportation system is rooted in racism
  17. The destructive life of a Mardi Gras bead
  18. California's rain may shed light on new questions about what causes earthquakes
  19. Why Trump's EPA is far more vulnerable to attack than Reagan's or Bush's
  20. Cybersecurity of the power grid: A growing challenge
  21. The transgender bathroom controversy: Four essential reads
  22. How Iranian filmmakers like Asghar Farhadi defy the censors
  23. Hidden figures: How black women preachers spoke truth to power
  24. Seeking truth among 'alternative facts'
  25. How undocumented immigrants negotiate a place for themselves in America
  26. Who exactly are 'radical' Muslims?
  27. Decades into diabetes, insulin therapy still hard to manage
  28. Broadband internet can help rural communities connect – if they use it
  29. Uber's dismissive treatment of employee's sexism claims is all too typical
  30. Want a stronger economy? Give immigrants a warm welcome
  31. How the 'guerrilla archivists' saved history – and are doing it again under Trump
  32. Threats of violent Islamist and far-right extremism: What does the research say?
  33. Red state rural America is acting on climate change – without calling it climate change
  34. Puzder's failed nomination reminds us why the secretary of labor matters
  35. In latest skirmish of western land wars, Congress supports mining and ranching
  36. Diversity is on the rise in urban and rural communities, and it's here to stay
  37. How social media stars are fighting for the Left
  38. How governments and companies can prevent the next insider attack
  39. Building privacy right into software code
  40. Inmates are excluded from Medicaid – here's why it makes sense to change that
  41. Can Trump resist the power of behavioral science's dark side?
  42. Is your smartphone making you shy?
  43. Where is 'rural America,' and what does it look like?
  44. How much does the Johnson Amendment curtail church freedom?
  45. More lessons from Dolly the sheep: Is a clone really born at age zero?
  46. 20 years after Dolly: Everything you always wanted to know about the cloned sheep and what came next
  47. Trump's moves on the Dakota Access Pipeline portend more clashes with states
  48. Who counts as black?
  49. White House in turmoil shows why Trump's no CEO
  50. Russia, Trump and the 2016 election: What's the best way for Congress to investigate?