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Testing of backlogged rape evidence leads to hundreds of convictions

  • Written by Rachel Lovell, Senior Research Associate, Case Western Reserve University

Hundreds of thousands of untested rape kits, also known as sexual assault kits (SAKs), languish in evidence storage facilities across the U.S. This backlog denies justice to victims and allows rapists the opportunity to continue to harm others.

Based on research from Case Western Reserve University on Cuyahoga County’s (Ohio) backlogged rape...

Read more: Testing of backlogged rape evidence leads to hundreds of convictions

What could the rest of the world do if Trump pulls the US out of the Paris Agreement on climate change?

  • Written by Henrik Selin, Associate Professor in the Frederick S Pardee School of Global Studies, Boston University
imageNews of Trump's election has had a deep impact on global climate talks now going on.IISD/ENB | Liz Rubin

Climate change negotiators from around the world – now meeting at the COP22 conference in Marrakech, Morocco – continue steadfastly with the task of putting meaning and action into the landmark 2015 Paris Agreement to bring down...

Read more: What could the rest of the world do if Trump pulls the US out of the Paris Agreement on climate...

Climate change is affecting all life on Earth – and that's not good news for humanity

  • Written by Brett Scheffers, Assistant Professor, University of Florida
imageResearchers have found that dragonflies have become on average lighter-colored over the past half-century in response to higher temperatures. norio-nakayama/flickr, CC BY-SA

More than a dozen authors from different universities and nongovernmental organizations around the world have concluded, based on an analysis of hundreds of studies, that...

Read more: Climate change is affecting all life on Earth – and that's not good news for humanity

Voters' embarrassment and fear of social stigma messed with pollsters' predictions

  • Written by Aradhna Krishna, Dwight F Benton Professor of Marketing, University of Michigan
imageWhat if people don't tell pollsters the truth?Liar image via www.shutterstock.com.

The outcome of the presidential election shocked many people – and they pointed their fingers at misleading polls that didn’t do a great job predicting what actually happened.

On Election Day, analyst Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight predicted that Clint...

Read more: Voters' embarrassment and fear of social stigma messed with pollsters' predictions

Caring for veterans: A privilege and a duty

  • Written by Sanjay Saint, George Dock Professor of Medicine, University of Michigan

Veterans Day had its start as Armistice Day, marking the end of World War I hostilities. The holiday serves as an occasion to both honor those who have served in our armed forces and to ask whether we, as a nation, are doing right by them.

In recent years, that question has been directed most urgently at Veterans Affairs hospitals. Some critics...

Read more: Caring for veterans: A privilege and a duty

The perils of a life in isolation

  • Written by Frank T. McAndrew, Cornelia H. Dudley Professor of Psychology, Knox College
image'Alone' via www.shutterstock.com

Humans are hardwired to interact with others, especially during times of stress. On the other hand, when we go through a trying ordeal alone, a lack of emotional support and comradeship can increase our anxiety and hinder our ability to cope.

This message is forcefully driven home in the newly released thriller...

Read more: The perils of a life in isolation

Janet Reno: Reflecting on America’s first female attorney general and her example of public service

  • Written by Jon L. Mills, Professor of Law, University of Florida

Some of today’s politicians seem to equate leadership with shouting, arrogance, cruelty and deception. Janet Reno, the first female U.S. attorney general and the second longest serving attorney general in history, was so honest she scared some politicians.

They called her blunt. They said sometimes she was not a team player. But she was...

Read more: Janet Reno: Reflecting on America’s first female attorney general and her example of public service

Here's why 'baby talk' is good for your baby

  • Written by Catherine E. Laing, Postdoctoral Associate, Duke University
imageThe way you talk to your baby makes a difference.Elvis Kennedy, CC BY-NC-ND

When we read, it’s very easy for us to tell individual words apart: In written language, spaces are used to separate words from one another. But this is not the case with spoken language – speech is a stream of sound, from which the listener has to separate...

Read more: Here's why 'baby talk' is good for your baby

Donald Trump tweeted himself into the White House

  • Written by Shontavia Johnson, Professor of Intellectual Property Law, Drake University
imageTrumpisms at your fingertips.AP Photo/John Locher

Donald Trump’s presidential election victory has been described as stunning, shocking and having elicited a “primal scream” from the media. The president-elect resonated enough with more than 59 million Americans that they pulled the lever for him in the voting booth and propelled...

Read more: Donald Trump tweeted himself into the White House

House results: Republicans lose just a handful of seats, but party factions run deep

  • Written by Kathryn L. Pearson, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Minnesota

It is not a surprise that Republicans retained their majority in the U.S. House of Representatives. The unexpected result is that they will work with a Republican president and a Republican-controlled Senate in the 115th Congress.

A sea change lies ahead on Capitol Hill as Republicans shift from vociferously opposing a Democratic president to...

Read more: House results: Republicans lose just a handful of seats, but party factions run deep

More Articles ...

  1. Why repealing Obamacare may not be as easy as Trump thinks
  2. Sexual assault enters virtual reality
  3. Managing climate risk in Trump's America
  4. Big Tobacco loses tax battle in California, but Big Marijuana is on the rise
  5. How the U.S. presidential results are being seen around the globe
  6. Reports of the death of polling have been greatly exaggerated
  7. Cage-free sounds good, but does it mean a better life for chickens?
  8. Donald Trump and the world: Five challenges
  9. The oceans are full of plastic, but why do seabirds eat it?
  10. Is the 'Trump effect' lingering in increased school bullying?
  11. After a brutal campaign, a moment of transcendence for Hillary Clinton
  12. America's aging voting machines managed to survive another election
  13. What President Trump means for the future of energy and climate
  14. What Donald Trump's surprise victory means for the economy and business
  15. Marijuana legalization: Big changes across country
  16. In victory speech, Donald Trump discovers the power of 'we'
  17. This election was not hacked – but it was attacked
  18. Are wealthy donors influencing the public school agenda?
  19. Democrats failed to gain a Senate majority, too
  20. Five things that explain Donald Trump’s stunning presidential election victory
  21. What we can learn from market's reaction to a President Trump
  22. How Twitter bots affected the US presidential campaign
  23. Supermoons are big and bright, but not as rare as the hype would suggest
  24. Why the court 'victory' for Malheur militants was anything but
  25. Inside Aleppo's medical nightmare, and why we must act
  26. The fear election
  27. 'Spearphishing' roiled the presidential campaign – here's how to protect yourself
  28. What Theresa May could teach America’s next president about leading a divided country
  29. A president in a pantsuit?
  30. Q A with Yale scholar: How the FBI has meddled in politics before
  31. Voters in Texas, North Carolina, Ohio and Florida are changing the swing state map
  32. Libertarian economics: A philosophical critique
  33. Civility at the core of American democracy, whatever politicians say
  34. Climate change could be a unifying cause of millennials, but will they vote?
  35. In Trump, extremism found its champion – and maybe its demise
  36. Violence has long been a feature of American elections
  37. How to deal with election anger? Try a little tenderness
  38. What can the mass 'check-in' at Standing Rock tell us about online advocacy?
  39. Understanding the genes that make our circadian clocks tick
  40. How Trump's 'Mormon problem' could mean he loses Utah to Evan McMullin
  41. Masculine culture responsible for keeping women out of computer science, engineering
  42. What HBO's Westworld gets wrong (and right) about human nature
  43. Partisan attacks on Clinton Foundation obscure real issues with how it's run
  44. Could Colorado's proposed health care plan be a model for the rest of us?
  45. History points to more dangerous Malheur-style standoffs
  46. Why voters don't seem to forgive Clinton, while Trump gets a free pass
  47. Should oil companies like Exxon be forced to disclose climate change risks?
  48. When 'energy' drinks actually contained radioactive energy
  49. Global climate talks move to Marrakesh: Here's what they need to achieve
  50. Dylann Roof, Michael Slager on trial: Five essential reads on Charleston