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Melting glaciers, shifting biomes and dying trees in our national parks – yet we can take action on climate change

  • Written by Patrick Gonzalez, Principal Climate Change Scientist, National Park Service

Trees are dying across Yosemite and Yellowstone national parks. Glaciers are melting in Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in Alaska. Corals are bleaching in Virgin Islands National Park. Published field research conducted in U.S. national parks has detected these changes and shown that human climate change – carbon pollution from our...

Read more: Melting glaciers, shifting biomes and dying trees in our national parks – yet we can take action...

Election legitimacy at risk, even without a November cyberattack

  • Written by Herbert Lin, Senior Research Scholar for Cyber Policy and Security, Center for International Security and Cooperation, Stanford University

We’ve heard a lot in recent weeks about the potential for Russian meddling in the presidential election. A lot of circumstantial evidence – and the fact that Russia has the means, motive and opportunity to conduct these attacks – suggests an important Russian role in the leaks of confidential emails from the Democratic National...

Read more: Election legitimacy at risk, even without a November cyberattack

How American policing fails neighborhoods -- and cops

  • Written by James J. Nolan, Professor of Sociology, West Virginia University

How should we understand the violence, counterviolence and civil unrest that mark the current era in American policing?

And, based on this understanding, what can we do to stop it?

Rather than focus on the characteristics of “bad apple” police officers or angry, revengeful citizens, sociologists like me tend to look at the context in...

Read more: How American policing fails neighborhoods -- and cops

Early stage breast cancer: How to know whether to forgo chemo

  • Written by Valerie Malyvanh Jansen, Clinical Instructor, Vanderbilt University
imageWoman receiving chemotherapy.From www.shutterstock.com

There has been substantial publicity about the MINDACT trial, which could lead to changes in breast cancer treatment. The study’s results suggest that women with a certain genetic profile would have a good chance of survival and cure regardless of chemotherapy.

While the results are...

Read more: Early stage breast cancer: How to know whether to forgo chemo

For African-American families, a daily task to combat negative stereotypes about hair

  • Written by Marva L. Lewis, Associate Professor, Tulane University
imagePsychology research shows how hair combing sends a powerful message from parent to child.'Combing' via www.shutterstock.com

Mothers across all cultures may worry about being judged for their child’s appearance. But for African-American mothers, a child’s hairstyle can be especially anxiety-inducing. If they don’t properly care for...

Read more: For African-American families, a daily task to combat negative stereotypes about hair

How civic intelligence can teach what it means to be a citizen

  • Written by Douglas Schuler, Professor, Interdisciplinary Studies, Evergreen State College
imageWhat does it mean to be a citizen in today's world?Christopher Kennedy / Cassie Thornton, CC BY-SA

This political season, citizens will be determining who will represent them in the government. This, of course, includes deciding who will be the next president, but also who will serve in thousands of less prominent positions.

But is voting the only...

Read more: How civic intelligence can teach what it means to be a citizen

Believing in free will makes you feel more like your true self

  • Written by Elizabeth Seto, Ph.D. Candidate in Social and Personality Psychology, Texas A&M University
imageBelieving in free will makes us feel more like ourselves.Man walking via www.shutterstock.com.

Do we have free will? This is a question that scholars have debated for centuries and will probably continue to debate for centuries to come.

This isn’t a question I can answer, but what I am interested in is “what happens if we do (or do not)...

Read more: Believing in free will makes you feel more like your true self

Does TPP's slow death mean the world is now unsafe for trade deals?

  • Written by Charles Hankla, Associate Professor of Political Science, Georgia State University

It seems that the world has become unsafe for trade agreements. In particular, the Trans-Pacific Partnership (TPP), a major new trade deal among the United States and 11 other Pacific Rim nations, has become a political lightning rod for both the left and the right.

As if to highlight that fact once again, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said...

Read more: Does TPP's slow death mean the world is now unsafe for trade deals?

Former chief White House ethics lawyer: Clinton Foundation controversy is just a distraction from bigger issue

  • Written by Richard Painter, S. Walter Richey Professor of Corporate Law, University of Minnesota

Hillary Clinton’s critics claim that federal ethics laws were broken when her subordinates at the State Department arranged meetings and other favors for donors to the Bill and Hillary Clinton Foundation.

Evidence is still surfacing as to who at the State Department did what and why. But as a former chief White House ethics lawyer in the Bush...

Read more: Former chief White House ethics lawyer: Clinton Foundation controversy is just a distraction from...

TV news stories about birth control quote politicians and priests more often than medical experts

  • Written by Elizabeth W. Patton, Clinical Lecturer, Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Michigan
imageMedical experts are rarely quoted in TV news stories about contraception.Image of TV studio via www.shutterstock.com.

Ninety-nine percent of reproductive age U.S. women who have ever had sex have used contraception at some point in their lives. And thanks to the Affordable Care Act’s contraceptive mandate, more people have access to...

Read more: TV news stories about birth control quote politicians and priests more often than medical experts

More Articles ...

  1. Cybathlon: A bionics competition for people with disabilities
  2. Who should pay for our corn ethanol policy – Big Oil or gas stations?
  3. Immigration: Five essential reads
  4. Why Colin Kaepernick is like George Washington
  5. To fix America’s child care, let’s look at the past
  6. How does a computer know where you're looking?
  7. Want to prevent lone wolf terrorism? Promote a 'sense of belonging'
  8. The U.S. wants Costa Rica to host refugees before they cross the border. Here's why
  9. Obama's Hawaiian marine preserve: Massive potential, monumental challenges
  10. Is the Trans-Pacific Partnership dead? Seven essential reads
  11. Are US antitrust regulators giving Silicon Valley's 'free' apps a free pass?
  12. Curing health care with a dose of big data and common sense
  13. The most important dam you probably haven't heard of
  14. Why has Japan's massacre of disabled gone unnoticed? For answers, look to the past
  15. Guns in Donald Trump's America
  16. Finding better ways to get hydrogen fuel from water
  17. A tale of two GDPs: Why Republicans and Democrats live in different economic realities
  18. How victims of terror are remembered distorts perceptions of safety
  19. Will a merged Tesla-SolarCity put a solar-powered battery in every home?
  20. Fentanyl and other synthetic opioids sold as counterfeits in deadly new trend
  21. How men benefit from family-friendly tenure policies
  22. Failed coup in Turkey means thousands are voting with their feet
  23. Scientists at work: Public archaeologists dig before the construction crews do
  24. Russia's aggressive power is resurgent, online and off
  25. Polio eradication effort challenged, but not derailed
  26. Rebuilding ground zero: How twin mandates of revival and remembrance reshaped Lower Manhattan
  27. Corporate sponsors at Yosemite? The case against privatizing national parks
  28. The real reason the EpiPen and other off-patents are so expensive
  29. David Duke, Donald Trump and the dog whistle
  30. Fracking and health: What we know from Pennsylvania's natural gas boom
  31. Could gay-straight alliances reduce school bullying?
  32. This little-known pioneering educator put coding in the classroom
  33. Understanding mosquitoes can help us find better ways to kill them
  34. Getting serious about funny: Psychologists see humor as a character strength
  35. Who dies in police custody? Texas, California offer new tools to find out
  36. What's ailing the ACA: Insurers or Congress?
  37. Why silence continues to surround pregnancy discrimination in the workplace
  38. Playing at torture, a not so trivial pursuit
  39. How the Islamic State recruits and coerces children
  40. Voter ID laws: Why black Democrats' fight for the ballot in Mississippi still matters
  41. Get better election predictions by combining diverse forecasts
  42. Harried doctors can make diagnostic errors: They need time to think
  43. How Dostoevsky predicted Trump's America
  44. Suburban sprawl and poor preparation worsened flood damage in Louisiana
  45. Louisiana's Cajun Navy shines light on growing value of boat rescuers
  46. King Coal is dethroned in the US – and that's good news for the environment
  47. Slavery on campus – recovering the history of Washington College's discarded slaves
  48. Relationship advice from the government doesn't help low-income couples – here's what might
  49. How racism has shaped welfare policy in America since 1935
  50. Big Tobacco aims its guns to kill California tobacco tax