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The Jewish vote may swing key undecided counties, study says

  • Written by Daniel Parmer, Research Associate, Brandeis University

Jews may account for roughly only 2 percent of the American adult population, but their concentration in a number of swing states and counties makes them a potentially pivotal demographic in this fall’s presidential election.

Between 80 and 85 percent of Jews turn out to vote in national elections – more than 20 percent higher than the...

Read more: The Jewish vote may swing key undecided counties, study says

One step toward making criminal justice less biased

  • Written by Shima Baughman, Professor of Criminal Law, University of Utah
imageHow can justice be blind to race?www.shuterstock.com

Many experts and politicians believe there is, as Hillary Clinton has said repeatedly, “systematic racism throughout the criminal justice system.”

As recently as the first presidential debate, Hillary Clinton made this point a hallmark of her criminal justice agenda. She claimed that...

Read more: One step toward making criminal justice less biased

We could prevent millions of cancer deaths each year with knowledge we already have

  • Written by David Hunter, Vincent L. Gregory Professor of Cancer Prevention, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Harvard University

Vice President Joe Biden’s Cancer Moonshot Blue Ribbon Panel has released 10 recommendations to accelerate a new national effort “to end cancer as we know it.” These initiatives, focused mainly on the U.S., will almost certainly extend the lives of some cancer patients in the future.

However, cancer deaths worldwide are estimated...

Read more: We could prevent millions of cancer deaths each year with knowledge we already have

Dems and the GOP are miles apart on yet another issue: Public lands

  • Written by John Freemuth, Professor of Public Policy and Senior Fellow Cecil Andrus Center for Public Policy, Boise State University
imageWhat does 'public' land mean to the two political parties?U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, CC BY

It’s unlikely the presidential candidates will field a question about public lands during their last debate. But public land is an issue that concerns many Americans, with arguments over it flaring up with cyclical regularity.

The Malheur National...

Read more: Dems and the GOP are miles apart on yet another issue: Public lands

Straight girls do kiss on campus, but what about those who don't go to college?

  • Written by Jamie Budnick, Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology, University of Michigan
imageFrench painter Paul-Prosper Tillier's 'Baigneuses' (1890).

“Straight girls kissing” has become something of a curious and controversial cultural phenomenon over the last 15 years.

Madonna and Britney Spears famously locked lips in front of millions during the 2003 Video Music Awards, with Scarlett Johansson and Sandra Bullock following...

Read more: Straight girls do kiss on campus, but what about those who don't go to college?

Do you buy a smartphone for its curves? Do you buy a car for its cup holders?

  • Written by Timothy Holbrook, Professor of Law, Emory University
imageHow much did Samsung's phone sales depend on it looking like an iPhone?Comparison Smartphone/YouTube, CC BY-SA

On Oct. 7, Samsung found itself facing an unpleasant result in one of the many patent lawsuits it’s a part of: A federal appellate court reinstated a jury verdict of US$119 million against Samsung in favor of Apple.

In that case,...

Read more: Do you buy a smartphone for its curves? Do you buy a car for its cup holders?

What we can learn from Trump’s $916 million loss

  • Written by David Hasen, Professor of Law, University of Colorado

On Oct. 1, the New York Times reported that Donald Trump claimed a US$916 million net operating loss on his 1995 New York state income tax return. The article suggested his doing so would have allowed the Republican presidential candidate to avoid paying federal income taxes for up to 18 years.

Since Trump himself has not released any of his tax...

Read more: What we can learn from Trump’s $916 million loss

Reading, writing and mental health care: why schools need added services

  • Written by Ann DiGirolamo, Director, Center of Excellence for Children's Behavioral Health, Georgia Health Policy Center, Georgia State University
imageYoung students in classroom via Shutterstock.From www.shutterstock.com

Students across the country have stepped into their classrooms, filled with excitement to start a new year. In many cases, though, students also bring physical, social, and emotional concerns.

For some students, these concerns are normal back-to-school jitters that will not...

Read more: Reading, writing and mental health care: why schools need added services

Weather forecasters can't manipulate hurricane warnings — here's why

  • Written by David Titley, Professor of Practice in Meteorology & Director Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk, Adjunct Senior Fellow, Center for New American Security, Pennsylvania State University
imageDamage from Hurricane Matthew in North Charleston, South Carolina, October 2016.Ryan Johnson/Flickr, CC BY-SA

Many mini-dramas develop during major disasters like Hurricane Matthew, which has left a trail of devastation in the Caribbean and the southeastern United States. One such drama occurred outside of the storm zone: Conservative news blogger...

Read more: Weather forecasters can't manipulate hurricane warnings — here's why

More Articles ...

  1. Latino voters respond to outreach, not insults
  2. Fixing US elections
  3. Is it time for a new model to fund science research in higher education?
  4. Donald Trump and the dangerous rhetoric of portraying people as objects
  5. Donald Trump is taking a page from Reconstruction-era white supremacists
  6. Where the parties stand on environmental regulation: Six essential reads
  7. Getting to yes in Colombia: What it would take to reintegrate the FARC
  8. Love it or hate it, Obamacare has expanded coverage for millions
  9. Do we swear too much?
  10. After our universe's cosmic dawn, what happened to all its original hydrogen?
  11. Beyond Olympic gold: US kids getting lapped in aerobic fitness
  12. Nobel prize-winning autophagy research laid groundwork for potential Parkinson's treatment
  13. Why is taking photographs banned in many museums and historic places?
  14. Columbus Day: Black legend meets White City
  15. What if nature, like corporations, had the rights and protections of a person?
  16. Trump vs. Clinton: Three key moments from the second debate
  17. Physicists explore exotic states of matter inspired by Nobel-winning research
  18. The curious history of the Nobel Peace Prize
  19. António Guterres to be the next UN Secretary-General: Good choice, bad process
  20. Fighting another war: How many military personnel and veterans will have PTSD in 2025?
  21. 'Deepwater Horizon' honors oil rig workers but oversimplifies the blowout
  22. When catastrophe strikes, who foots the bill?
  23. The oppressive seeds of the Colin Kaepernick backlash
  24. Latest jobs report shows why Congress needs to get into the game
  25. Don't shoot the messenger: How RNA could keep us young
  26. Basic income after automation? That’s not how capitalism works!
  27. How Wells Fargo encouraged employees to commit fraud
  28. A military view on climate change: It's eroding our national security and we should prepare for it
  29. Can great apes read your mind?
  30. Clinton and Trump need to address police violence in debate
  31. Play video games, advance science
  32. The opioid epidemic: Six essential reads
  33. Dear Donald Trump: I treat combat veterans with PTSD, and they are not weak
  34. Terrorism fallout shelters: Is it time to resurrect nuclear civil defense?
  35. Hurricane Matthew approaches the eastern US: Six essential reads
  36. What displaced Colombians living abroad think about the peace efforts
  37. What the Trump Foundation controversies reveal about the candidate and his business acumen
  38. The Nobel Prize for Physics goes to topology – and mathematicians applaud
  39. Why one-size-fits-all approach does not work for teacher quality
  40. In parts of the world, bride price encourages parents to educate daughters
  41. Biofuels turn out to be a climate mistake – here's why
  42. How saying you're multiracial changes the way people see you
  43. Should NSA and Cyber Command have separate leadership?
  44. Tired of getting stuck with needles? Ask your doctor to just say 'once.'
  45. Kaine vs. Pence: Two key moments from the debate
  46. Before Nobels: Gifts to and from rich patrons were early science's currency
  47. What Twitter's streaming experiment means for the future of live TV
  48. As Brazil tilts rightward, Lula's leftist legacy of lifting the poor is at risk
  49. Why insurance companies control your medical care
  50. Science is key to U.S. standing, but presidential candidates largely ignore it