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Birthright citizenship case at Supreme Court reveals deeper questions about judicial authority to halt unlawful policies

  • Written by Cassandra Burke Robertson, Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Professional Ethics, Case Western Reserve University
imageThe U.S. Supreme Court is considering whether a single federal judge should have the power to temporarily halt presidential policies across the entire country.Rudy Sulgan, The Image Bank/Getty Images

When one judge blocks a president’s policies nationwide, alarm bells ring. Should a single judge wield this much power? Can they halt policies...

Read more: Birthright citizenship case at Supreme Court reveals deeper questions about judicial authority to...

Disarming Hezbollah is key to Lebanon’s recovery − but task is complicated by regional shifts, ceasefire violations

  • Written by Mireille Rebeiz, Chair of Middle East Studies and Associate Professor of Francophone and Women's, Gender and Sexuality Studies, Dickinson College
imageSlain Lebanese Hezbollah leader Hassan Nasrallah looms large in Lebanon.Anwar Amro/AFP via Getty Images

Within a span of two weeks from late April to early May 2025, Israel launched two aerial attacks ostensibly targeting Hezbollah in Lebanon: The first, on April 27, struck a building in Beirut’s southern suburbs; the second, an assault in...

Read more: Disarming Hezbollah is key to Lebanon’s recovery − but task is complicated by regional shifts,...

Unprecedented cuts to the National Science Foundation endanger research that improves economic growth, national security and your life

  • Written by Paul Bierman, Professor of Natural Resources and Environmental Science, University of Vermont
imageThe National Science Foundation funds America's next great innovations, including space-related research.Heritage Space/Heritage Images/Getty Images

Look closely at your mobile phone or tablet. Touch-screen technology, speech recognition, digital sound recording and the internet were all developed using funding from the U.S. National Science...

Read more: Unprecedented cuts to the National Science Foundation endanger research that improves economic...

What Pope Leo XIV’s coat of arms and motto reveal about his dedication to the ideals of St. Augustine − an art historian explains

  • Written by Virginia Raguin, Distinguished Professor of Humanities Emerita, College of the Holy Cross
imageA 17th-century stained glass image of St. Augustine.Artist Tobias Müller, 1622. Michel M. Raguin, with the permission of the Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton NJ, U.S.

Pope Leo XIV has announced his motto and coat of arms – a long-held tradition for those in the ranks of bishops, cardinals and popes. The choice of symbols and...

Read more: What Pope Leo XIV’s coat of arms and motto reveal about his dedication to the ideals of St....

Hurricane disaster planning with aging parents should start now, before the storm: 5 tips

  • Written by Lee Ann Rawlins Williams, Clinical Assistant Professor of Education, Health and Behavior Studies, University of North Dakota

When I lived in Florida, I had a neighbor named Ms. Carmen. She was in her late 70s, fiercely independent and lived alone with her two dogs and one cat, which were her closest companions.

Each hurricane season, she would anxiously ask if I would check on her when the winds began to pick up. She once told me: I’m more afraid of being forgotten...

Read more: Hurricane disaster planning with aging parents should start now, before the storm: 5 tips

Congress began losing power decades ago − and now it’s giving away what remains to Trump

  • Written by Charlie Hunt, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Boise State University
imageWhere did Congress go?Julia Nikhinson/Bloomberg Creative via Getty Images

Republicans in Congress have been making behind-the-scenes efforts to pass major domestic legislation via the federal budget process. They include potential cuts to Medicaid and extending the 2017 Trump tax cuts.

But even though it’s Congress’ job to pass a budget...

Read more: Congress began losing power decades ago − and now it’s giving away what remains to Trump

Algebra is more than alphabet soup – it’s the language of algorithms and relationships

  • Written by Courtney Gibbons, Associate Professor of Mathematics, Hamilton College
imageAlgebra often involves manipulating numbers or other objects using operations like addition and multiplication.Flavio Coelho/Moment via Getty Images

You scrambled up a Rubik’s cube, and now you want to put it back in order. What sequence of moves should you make?

Surprise: You can answer this question with modern algebra.

Most folks who have...

Read more: Algebra is more than alphabet soup – it’s the language of algorithms and relationships

US safety net helps protect children from abuse and neglect, and some of those programs are threatened by proposed budget cuts

  • Written by Todd Herrenkohl, Professor of Social Work, University of Michigan
imageSafety net programs protect children in many ways.Energy/E+ via Getty Images

President Donald Trump and Republicans in the House of Representatives have put forward budget proposals that would slash spending by hundreds of millions of dollars over the next decade on several programs that support low-income U.S. families with children.

If those cuts...

Read more: US safety net helps protect children from abuse and neglect, and some of those programs are...

Pope Francis drew inspiration from Latin American church and its martyrs – leaving a legacy for Pope Leo

  • Written by Elizabeth O’Donnell Gandolfo, Associate Professor of Catholic and Latin American Studies, School of Divinity, Wake Forest University
imageA mural of Roman Catholic Archbishop Oscar Romero decorates a wall in Panchimalco, El Salvador, May 21, 2015. AP Photo/Salvador Melendez

Pope Leo XIV’s election marks a historic moment: the first pope from an English-speaking country, and the first from the United States. Even more significant than these “firsts,” I believe, is a...

Read more: Pope Francis drew inspiration from Latin American church and its martyrs – leaving a legacy for...

Challenges to high-performance computing threaten US innovation

  • Written by Jack Dongarra, Emeritus Professor of Computer Science, University of Tennessee
imageOak Ridge National Laboratory's Frontier supercomputer is one of the world's fastest.Oak Ridge Leadership Computing Facility, CC BY

High-performance computing, or HPC for short, might sound like something only scientists use in secret labs, but it’s actually one of the most important technologies in the world today. From predicting the weather...

Read more: Challenges to high-performance computing threaten US innovation

More Articles ...

  1. Pacific voyagers’ remarkable environmental knowledge allowed for long-distance navigation without Western technology
  2. Pope Leo XIV’s link to Haiti is part of a broader American story of race, citizenship and migration
  3. How does the EPA know a pesticide is safe to use in my yard?
  4. Lady Gaga bomb plot: Thwarted plan lifts veil on the gamification of hate and gendered nature of online radicalization
  5. How your genes interact with your environment changes your disease risk − new research counts the ways
  6. Trump is making it easier to fire federal workers, but they have some legal protections - 3 essential reads
  7. Detroit’s next mayor can do these 3 things to support neighborhoods beyond downtown
  8. Taking intermittent quizzes reduces achievement gaps and enhances online learning, even in highly distracting environments
  9. How redefining just one word could strip the Endangered Species Act’s ability to protect vital habitat
  10. ‘The pope is Peruvian!’ How 2 decades in South America shaped the vision of Pope Leo XIV
  11. What or where is the Indo-Pacific? How a foreign policy pivot redefined the global map
  12. Why protecting wildland is crucial to American freedom and identity
  13. Trump moves to gut low-income energy assistance as summer heat descends and electricity prices rise
  14. AI can scan vast numbers of social media posts during disasters to guide first responders
  15. Why collect asteroid samples? 4 essential reads on what these tiny bits of space rock can tell scientists
  16. Researchers uncovered hundreds of genes linked to OCD, providing clues about how it changes the brain − new research
  17. Why do cuts to Medicaid matter for Americans over 65? 2 experts on aging explain why lives are at stake
  18. Where tomorrow’s scientists prefer to live − and where they’d rather not
  19. How Asian American became a racial grouping – and why many with Asian roots don’t identify with the term these days
  20. Trump’s bid to end birthright citizenship heads to the Supreme Court
  21. Trump heads to the Gulf aiming to bolster trade ties – but side talks on Tehran, Gaza could drive a wedge between US and Israel
  22. From defenders to skeptics: The sharp decline in young Americans’ support for free speech
  23. If you really want to close the US trade deficit, try boosting innovation in rural manufacturing
  24. Smartwatches promise all kinds of quality-of-life improvements − here are 5 things users should keep in mind
  25. Calorie counts on menus and food labels may not help consumers choose healthier foods, new research shows
  26. Space law doesn’t protect historical sites, mining operations and bases on the Moon – a space lawyer describes a framework that could
  27. In death penalty cases, the quest for justice is not America’s highest value
  28. When does a kid become an adult?
  29. As US doubles down on fossil fuels, communities will have to adapt to the consequences − yet climate adaptation funding is on the chopping block
  30. As US ramps up fossil fuels, communities will have to adapt to the consequences − yet climate adaptation funding is on the chopping block
  31. India-Pakistan ceasefire shouldn’t disguise fact that norms have changed in South Asia, making future de-escalation much harder
  32. From pulpit to pitch: Pope Francis used sport to get his message to a wider world − that could continue with baseball-loving Leo XIV
  33. Science requires ethical oversight – without federal dollars, society’s health and safety are at risk
  34. I’m a business professor who asked dozens of former students how they define success. Here are their lessons for today’s grads
  35. I watched the Kremlin’s new Putin documentary (so you don’t have to) − here’s what it says about how the Russian leader views himself
  36. Nitrous oxide recreational use is linked to brain damage and sudden death − but ‘laughing gas’ is still sold all over the US
  37. Can Trump strip Harvard of its charitable status? Scholars of nonprofit law and accounting describe the obstacles in his way
  38. How William Howard Taft’s approach to government efficiency differed from Elon Musk’s slash-and-burn tactics
  39. Pope Leo XIV: Why the College of Cardinals chose the Chicago native and Augustinian to lead the church after Francis
  40. How the Take It Down Act tackles nonconsensual deepfake porn − and how it falls short
  41. Missile strikes and drone attacks heighten South Asian crisis - 8 questions answered over the role of Pakistan’s military in responding
  42. Pope Leo XIV faces limits on changing the Catholic Church − but Francis made reforms that set the stage for larger changes
  43. FDR united Democrats under the banner of ‘liberalism’ − but today’s Democratic Party has nothing to put on its hat
  44. Basic research advances science, and can also have broader impacts on modern society
  45. Philadelphians will soon choose their next district attorney − so what do DAs actually do?
  46. How proposed changes to higher education accreditation could impact campus diversity efforts
  47. When doctors don’t believe their patients’ pain – experts explain the all-too-common experience of medical gaslighting
  48. Humans are killing helpful insects in hundreds of ways − simple steps can reduce the harm
  49. Trump speaking poorly of other presidents is uncommon, but not unheard of, in American presidential history
  50. Recycling asphalt pavement can help the environment − now scientists are putting the safety of recycled pavement to the test