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Candidates control their own social media. What message are they sending?

  • Written by Jennifer Stromer-Galley, Professor of Information Studies, Syracuse University

We live in the age of social media. Indeed, many of us likely saw something about the Republican and Democratic conventions on Facebook, Twitter or even Instagram over the last few weeks.

A recent Pew Research Center study finds that the public is getting more of their news this election cycle from social media than ever before.

This finding makes...

Read more: Candidates control their own social media. What message are they sending?

How black grassroots politics led to the 14th Amendment and black citizenship

  • Written by Frederick Knight, Associate Professor of History, Morehouse College
imageBlacks faced violent attacks led by white Confederates after the Civil War ended.Wikimedia Commons

In 2008, the United States elected its first African-American president. But in the last year of Obama’s final term, the paradox and tragedy of race is as apparent now as any time in recent American history. A poll released earlier this month...

Read more: How black grassroots politics led to the 14th Amendment and black citizenship

GMOs lead the fight against Zika, Ebola and the next unknown pandemic

  • Written by Jeff Bessen, Ph.D. Candidate in Chemical Biology, Harvard University
imageGMOs may very well have filled up that syringe.Syringe image via www.shutterstock.com

The shadow of the Zika virus hangs over the Rio Olympic Games, with visitors and even high-profile athletes citing worries about Zika as a reason to stay away (even if the risk is probably quite low). The public’s concerns are a striking example of the need...

Read more: GMOs lead the fight against Zika, Ebola and the next unknown pandemic

How will Turkey's failed coup and massive purge affect its economic future?

  • Written by Nader Habibi, Professor of the Economics of the Middle East at the Crown Center for Middle East Studies, Brandeis University

The failed July 15 coup in Turkey has prompted a tsunami of responses by the government that is likely to have a lasting impact on all aspects of politics and society, including the economy.

The initial arrest of military personnel who were involved or suspected of participating in the coup did not come as a shock. The next phase did, however, as...

Read more: How will Turkey's failed coup and massive purge affect its economic future?

Going public: Could Clinton's health care proposals work?

  • Written by Richard Hirth, Professor, Department of Health Management and Public Policy, University of Michigan

As the spotlight shifts from the Republican to Democratic convention, Hillary Clinton’s plans for health care reform, including a proposed new “public option” for health insurance for some Americans, may draw greater attention from voters.

This option would offer a government-run health insurance plan that would be in direct...

Read more: Going public: Could Clinton's health care proposals work?

Why Turkey wants to silence its academics

  • Written by Fatma Müge Göçek, Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies, University of Michigan

After the July 15 coup attempt in Turkey, one of the first actions of the Turkish state and government was to purge thousands of academics and deans from office.

In a crackdown that rapidly spread across civil and military services, Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan ordered the closure of thousands of private schools and many...

Read more: Why Turkey wants to silence its academics

What is a party platform, and why do candidates often ignore them?

  • Written by Jennifer Victor, Associate Professor of Political Science, George Mason University
imageSpeaker of the House Paul Ryan closes the Republican National Convention.REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

Once again, we’ve reached that point in the political calendar when major parties draft platforms and adopt them at their conventions. The Republicans passed their 2016 party platform by uncontested voice vote on the first night of their convention,...

Read more: What is a party platform, and why do candidates often ignore them?

The science behind Hillary Clinton's problems with trust

  • Written by Jillian Jordan, Ph.D. Candidate in Psychology, Yale University

Large swaths of the American public want Donald J. Trump to be their president – maybe even a majority, according to an analysis from Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight in late July.

Many people – Democrats and Republicans alike – find this shocking.

Trump made his name as the “You’re fired” guy. He has never...

Read more: The science behind Hillary Clinton's problems with trust

Why fear of childbirth must be studied in the US

  • Written by Lee Roosevelt, Clinical Assistant Professor of Nursing, University of Michigan
imageAfraid?Pregnant woman via www.shutterstock.com.

Approximately four million women give birth each year in the United States. Most women have some level of fear about labor and birth; it is considered part of the normal experience of childbirth.

For some women, that fear may be about whether she and the baby will be healthy. Other women may fear that...

Read more: Why fear of childbirth must be studied in the US

Even presidential candidates need sleep

  • Written by Michael S. Jaffee, Vice chair, Department of Neurology, University of Florida

The demands of being a presidential candidate take a toll on sleep. And the demands are not likely to lessen for whomever is elected.

President Obama says he schedules six hours of sleep a night but that is not always possible, and Bill Clinton reported getting five to six hours. How much sleep is needed for senior executives such as our president...

Read more: Even presidential candidates need sleep

More Articles ...

  1. What Peru's new president can learn from Brazil's fight against corruption
  2. Gambling on limited information: our visual system and probabilistic inference
  3. The tragedy of Turkish democracy in five acts
  4. Can nature advocates save threatened Boundary Waters wilderness – again?
  5. Clinton's new college compact plan explained
  6. In Rio's bulldozed _favelas,_ echoes of America's shantytowns
  7. Dreams from their mothers: Hillary and Obama bending history again
  8. Technology changes how authors write, but the big impact isn't on their style
  9. What causes asthma? Clues from London's Great Smog with implications for air pollution today
  10. The Olympics won't spread Zika around the world
  11. Why 'woman' isn't Hillary Clinton's trump card
  12. The global impact of air conditioning: big and getting bigger
  13. Hooking up on campus: Sexual double standards may leave students feeling disempowered
  14. Zero tolerance laws increase suspension rates for black students
  15. Here’s a problem with the TPP that Hillary Clinton ignores at her peril
  16. Kaine was the logical choice as Hillary Clinton's Vice President
  17. It'll take more than tech for Elon Musk to pull off audacious new Tesla master plan
  18. The one Roger Ailes hire that changed American politics forever
  19. Drunk driving laws don't match the research
  20. Africa's growing and neglected cancer problem: We will all suffer
  21. Are gifted kids more sensitive to screen violence?
  22. Why calls for 'unity' are not enough: Look at the 1930s and 1940s
  23. In acceptance speech, Trump embraces role as hero of the forgotten
  24. Is the Constitution at stake in this year's election?
  25. More CO2 won't help northern forests or stave off climate change
  26. Does 'Black Lives Matter' still matter?
  27. It's time for us to admit we're afraid of terrorism
  28. The search for answers to hormonal contraception's role in HIV infection
  29. Donald Trump Jr.'s call for school choice in context
  30. Trump's health care plan: not truly on point
  31. Living in a chaotic world: how to keep anxiety at bay
  32. What factors influence income inequality?
  33. Is your nervous system a democracy or a dictatorship when controlling your behavior?
  34. Can America's deep political divide be traced back to 1832?
  35. Spain's Civil War and the Americans who fought in it: a convoluted legacy
  36. What anti-Trump activists can learn from Chicago '68
  37. Despite national efforts to fight addiction, states can tailor – and trim – programs
  38. Protecting our children after the wounds of racism divide us even more
  39. Ethically, must game designers respond to all player requests?
  40. Is internet freedom a tool for democracy or authoritarianism?
  41. Do students lose depth in digital reading?
  42. The 2016 Baseball Hall of Fame inductee you've never heard of
  43. As nuclear power plants close, states need to bet big on energy storage
  44. Attack in Nice exposes once again that our modern society lacks resilience
  45. America's police culture has a masculinity problem
  46. What will it take to reduce infections in the hospital?
  47. Why does using a period in a text message make you sound insincere or angry?
  48. Why toxic algae blooms like Florida’s are so dangerous to people and wildlife
  49. 3D printing: a new threat to gun control and security policy?
  50. Another tragedy, another #PrayFor, but what does it really say about who cares for whom?