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Here’s a problem with the TPP that Hillary Clinton ignores at her peril

  • Written by Rachel Rothschild, Assistant Professor and Faculty Fellow in Environmental Science, Technology and International Relations, New York University
imageFord, Brezhnev and their aides smile for the cameras as they sign the Helsinki Accords. OSCE

Hillary Clinton and many of her fellow Democrats meeting in Philadelphia hope to show the party unity arguably lacking when the Republicans gathered in Cleveland.

A sticking point to a unified Democratic Party, however, has been the Trans-Pacific Partnership...

Read more: Here’s a problem with the TPP that Hillary Clinton ignores at her peril

Kaine was the logical choice as Hillary Clinton's Vice President

  • Written by Andra Gillespie, Associate Professor, Political Science, Emory University

Hillary Clinton has selected Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine as her running mate.

While this news was not surprising – Kaine had long been suspected to be a top choice and made President Obama’s short list in 2008 – it does raise questions about Secretary Clinton’s choices. In an extremely polarized election contest where her own...

Read more: Kaine was the logical choice as Hillary Clinton's Vice President

It'll take more than tech for Elon Musk to pull off audacious new Tesla master plan

  • Written by Andrew Maynard, Director, Risk Innovation Lab, Arizona State University

Elon Musk – CEO of Tesla Motors – has just revealed the second part of his master plan for the company. And it’s a doozy. Not content with producing sleek electric cars (which to be fair, was only ever a stepping stone to greater things), Musk wants to fundamentally change how we live our lives. But the road to Musk’s...

Read more: It'll take more than tech for Elon Musk to pull off audacious new Tesla master plan

The one Roger Ailes hire that changed American politics forever

  • Written by Russell Frank, Associate Professor of Communications, Pennsylvania State University

Roger Ailes’ 20-year reign as the chairman of Fox News ended this week, the result of a sexual harassment scandal.

He will be remembered by journalism ethicists as the poster boy for conflict of interest. But of Ailes' many departures from journalistic norms of impartiality, the most egregious was his hiring of a cousin of presidential...

Read more: The one Roger Ailes hire that changed American politics forever

Drunk driving laws don't match the research

  • Written by Brad J. Uren, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan

Emergency physicians learn to be prepared for anything thrown at us in the clinical arena. Personal life is a different story. Last year a drunk driver with multiple prior offenses and no valid driver’s license smashed a truck through the wall of my son’s daycare.

Fortunately, the children and staff were in undamaged areas. But just...

Read more: Drunk driving laws don't match the research

Africa's growing and neglected cancer problem: We will all suffer

  • Written by Miles A. Pomper, Senior Fellow, James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Middlebury Institute of International Studies at Monterey

Uganda’s only radiation treatment machine broke down in April earlier this year, provoking widespread public criticism and leaving an estimated 30,000 new cancer patients stranded.

Yet the lack of adequate cancer care was hardly unique in the region: 80 percent of Africa’s one billion people have no access to radiotherapy although half...

Read more: Africa's growing and neglected cancer problem: We will all suffer

Are gifted kids more sensitive to screen violence?

  • Written by Jonathan Wai, Research Scientist, Duke University
imageWhat's the impact of violence on screen?Donnie Ray Jones, CC BY

The past few weeks have been full of several unfortunate violent events: the massacre in Orlando, the killing of black men by police officers, the sniper attack in Dallas, the Bastille Day attack in France, the violent coup attempt in Turkey and the shooting in Baton Rouge, Louisiana.

Wh...

Read more: Are gifted kids more sensitive to screen violence?

Why calls for 'unity' are not enough: Look at the 1930s and 1940s

  • Written by Wendy Wall, Associate Professor, 20th century American history, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imagePreaching unity in 1948 on the Freedom TrainUS National Archives and Records Administration

The U.S. is in the midst of a tepid economic recovery following a catastrophic downturn, but millions of Americans continue to feel left behind. Some turn their anger on corporations and Wall Street. Others target nonwhite immigrant workers. A charismatic...

Read more: Why calls for 'unity' are not enough: Look at the 1930s and 1940s

In acceptance speech, Trump embraces role as hero of the forgotten

  • Written by Jennifer Mercieca, Associate Professor of Communication and Director of the Aggie Agora, Texas A&M University

Donald Trump accepted the Republican nomination for the presidency in a speech destined to be remembered by history as the “I am your voice” speech – a phrase that Trump repeated several times to tie together his themes of economic revitalization, military strength and government honesty.

As a scholar of American political...

Read more: In acceptance speech, Trump embraces role as hero of the forgotten

Is the Constitution at stake in this year's election?

  • Written by Patrick Wiseman, Professor of Law, Georgia State University

If Senate Republicans are true to their word, the next president of the United States will nominate Justice Antonin Scalia’s replacement.

Given the age of several other members of the Supreme Court and rumors of others’ retirement, it is likely the next president will make as many as four nominations.

This potentially dramatic change in...

Read more: Is the Constitution at stake in this year's election?

More Articles ...

  1. More CO2 won't help northern forests or stave off climate change
  2. Does 'Black Lives Matter' still matter?
  3. It's time for us to admit we're afraid of terrorism
  4. The search for answers to hormonal contraception's role in HIV infection
  5. Donald Trump Jr.'s call for school choice in context
  6. Trump's health care plan: not truly on point
  7. Living in a chaotic world: how to keep anxiety at bay
  8. What factors influence income inequality?
  9. Is your nervous system a democracy or a dictatorship when controlling your behavior?
  10. Can America's deep political divide be traced back to 1832?
  11. Spain's Civil War and the Americans who fought in it: a convoluted legacy
  12. What anti-Trump activists can learn from Chicago '68
  13. Despite national efforts to fight addiction, states can tailor – and trim – programs
  14. Protecting our children after the wounds of racism divide us even more
  15. Ethically, must game designers respond to all player requests?
  16. Is internet freedom a tool for democracy or authoritarianism?
  17. Do students lose depth in digital reading?
  18. The 2016 Baseball Hall of Fame inductee you've never heard of
  19. As nuclear power plants close, states need to bet big on energy storage
  20. Attack in Nice exposes once again that our modern society lacks resilience
  21. America's police culture has a masculinity problem
  22. What will it take to reduce infections in the hospital?
  23. Why does using a period in a text message make you sound insincere or angry?
  24. Why toxic algae blooms like Florida’s are so dangerous to people and wildlife
  25. 3D printing: a new threat to gun control and security policy?
  26. Another tragedy, another #PrayFor, but what does it really say about who cares for whom?
  27. Dallas and Baton Rouge shooters: A reminder of the troubled history of black veterans in America
  28. Why Nice? Don't ignore France's troubled colonial legacy
  29. Curbing the marijuana industry's voracious energy appetite
  30. Blockchains: Focusing on bitcoin misses the real revolution in digital trust
  31. Sexting might actually be a sign of a committed relationship
  32. Was the Nice attacker really an IS 'lone wolf'?
  33. Why Pokemon Go became an instant phenomenon
  34. Mike Pence is the anti-Trump
  35. Nice attack: France's social fabric frays
  36. Will Trump use the convention to broadcast a more moderate image?
  37. Sea turtle ‘hitchhikers’ could play an important role in conservation
  38. Enough with the spoiler alerts! Plot spoilers often increase enjoyment
  39. Why public health worries don’t have to ruin your cookie dough
  40. After Fisher: affirmative action and Asian-American students
  41. What's at stake in China's claims to the South China Sea?
  42. Will Cleveland get an economic boost from Trump’s GOP coronation?
  43. How Twitter gives scientists a window into human happiness and health
  44. Moving exoskeletons from sci-fi into medical rehabilitation and therapy
  45. Racial inequality starts early – in preschool
  46. How did classified information get into those Hillary Clinton emails?
  47. Americans want a say in what happens to their donated blood and tissue in biobanks
  48. Up in smoke: We'll spend billions tomorrow for not helping poor people quit smoking today
  49. Can technology help fashion clean up its act?
  50. Loss for words: Art, language and the challenges of living on a changing planet