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What is a migrant? What is ICE? 10 terms to help you understand the debate over immigration

  • Written by Ernesto Castañeda, Professor of Latin American and Latino studies, American University
imageMigrants are apprehended by U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers after crossing into Ruby, Ariz., in June 2024.Brandon Bell/Getty Images

President Donald Trump aims to upend the immigration system in the United States in his first few days in office. On Jan. 20, 2025, Trump signed various executive orders that temporarily prevent refugees...

Read more: What is a migrant? What is ICE? 10 terms to help you understand the debate over immigration

Feeling political distress? Here are coping strategies a psychologist shares with his clients

  • Written by Jeremy P. Shapiro, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Psychological Sciences, Case Western Reserve University
imageThe polarized political climate is reflected in what drives some people to therapy.Microgen Images/Science Photo Library via Getty Images

I began practicing psychotherapy during the Reagan administration. Thirty years went by before distress about politics became a clinical issue for any of my clients.

I remember the moment it first happened: There...

Read more: Feeling political distress? Here are coping strategies a psychologist shares with his clients

Philanthropy provides $30B annually for science and health research − funding that tends to stay local

  • Written by Louis Shekhtman, Senior Lecturer of Information Science, Bar-Ilan University
imagePrivate support for science tends to stay in the donor's own state.ADragan Creative/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The foundations making charitable donations to support scientific and health research mostly give to institutions in their home states.

That’s what I found in a study I conducted with two fellow data scientists, Albert Laszlo...

Read more: Philanthropy provides $30B annually for science and health research − funding that tends to stay...

Human use of fire has produced an era of uncontrolled burning: Welcome to the Pyrocene

  • Written by Stephen Pyne, Emeritus Professor of Life Sciences, Arizona State University
imageFirefighters work near the Palisades Fire in Los Angeles on Jan. 11, 2025.Peyman Fakhraei/Middle East Images/AFP via Getty Images

Los Angeles is burning, but it isn’t alone. In recent years, fires have blasted through cities in Colorado, the southern Appalachians and the island of Maui, along with Canada, Australia, Portugal and Greece. What...

Read more: Human use of fire has produced an era of uncontrolled burning: Welcome to the Pyrocene

I’m an economist. Here’s why I’m worried the California insurance crisis could trigger broader financial instability

  • Written by Gary W. Yohe, Huffington Foundation Professor of Economics and Environmental Studies, Wesleyan University

The devastating wildfires in Los Angeles have made one threat very clear: Climate change is undermining the insurance systems American homeowners rely on to protect themselves from catastrophes. This breakdown is starting to become painfully clear as families and communities struggle to rebuild.

But another threat remains less recognized: This...

Read more: I’m an economist. Here’s why I’m worried the California insurance crisis could trigger broader...

How nonprofits pitch in before, during and after disasters strike

  • Written by Vanessa Crossgrove Fry, Associate Research Faculty/Interim Director, Boise State University
imageSocial Border Grill delivers food as part of World Central Kitchen relief efforts at an Eaton Fire temporary shelter in Pasadena, Calif., on Jan. 9, 2025.Kirby Lee/Getty Images

Los Angeles is reeling after fires of historic proportions raced through many communities in January 2025, destroying thousands of homes. The Conversation U.S. asked Vanessa...

Read more: How nonprofits pitch in before, during and after disasters strike

Agriculture secretary oversees food production, rural life, and nutrition programs that help millions afford healthy diets

  • Written by Kathleen Merrigan, Executive Director, Swette Center for Sustainable Food Systems, Arizona State University
imageA farmer harvests corn near McIntire, Iowa, on Oct. 31, 2023.Scott Olson/Getty Images

Two years after President Abraham Lincoln created the Department of Agriculture in 1862, he nicknamed it “the people’s department” because half of all Americans lived on farms at that time. Today, fewer than 2% of Americans farm, but the...

Read more: Agriculture secretary oversees food production, rural life, and nutrition programs that help...

Electrolyte beverages can help your body stay balanced − but may worsen symptoms if you’re sick

  • Written by Bryn Beeder, Visiting Instructor in Kinesiology, Nutrition, and Health, Miami University
imageLots of athletes choose electrolyte beverages during their workouts. PhotoAlto/Sandro Di Carlo Darsa via Getty Images

For generations, Gatorade and similar electrolyte beverages have been helpful tools for athletes seeking a competitive edge.

In 1965, Dr. Robert Cade and a team of scientists at the University of Florida College of Medicine created...

Read more: Electrolyte beverages can help your body stay balanced − but may worsen symptoms if you’re sick

Luce, a cartoon mascot for Catholic Church’s 2025 Jubilee, appeals to a younger generation while embracing time-honored traditions

  • Written by Virginia Raguin, Distinguished Professor of Humanities Emerita, College of the Holy Cross
image The Vatican introduces Luce at the Lucca Comics and Game convention in 2024.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uKiGMGkc0xk screenshot via Wikimedia.com, CC BY

Luce, the anime-inspired official mascot for the Catholic Church’s 2025 Jubilee, whose name means “light” in Italian, has been getting a lot of attention on social media. Some...

Read more: Luce, a cartoon mascot for Catholic Church’s 2025 Jubilee, appeals to a younger generation while...

Why is obesity linked to irregular heart rhythms? Researchers found 1 potential mechanism

  • Written by Arvind Sridhar, Postdoctoral Scholar in Cardiology, University of Illinois Chicago
imageA sudden onset of irregular heart rhythms can be disorienting.wildpixel/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Atrial fibrillation, or A-fib, is an irregular heart rhythm that increases a person’s risk of stroke, heart failure and even premature death.

While many risk factors contribute to A-fib, one stands out for its growing prevalence worldwide:...

Read more: Why is obesity linked to irregular heart rhythms? Researchers found 1 potential mechanism

More Articles ...

  1. Learning your political opponents don’t actually hate you can reduce toxic polarization and antidemocratic attitudes
  2. Lessons from ‘stop and frisk’ can help Philly police use drones to improve safety without compromising civil liberties
  3. Trump promises to end birthright citizenship and shut down the border – a legal scholar explains the challenges these actions could face
  4. Trump’s Jan. 6 pardon order ‘flies in the face of the facts’ of violent insurrection, retired federal judge explains
  5. Trump’s executive orders can make change – but are limited and can be undone by the courts
  6. Neighbors and strangers pulled together to help LA fire survivors – 60 years of research shows these unsung heroes are crucial to disaster response
  7. Amid LA fires, neighbors helped each other survive – 60 years of research shows how local heroes are crucial to disaster response
  8. Astronauts on NASA’s Artemis mission to the Moon will need better boots − here’s why
  9. Trump’s idea to use military to deport over 10 million migrants faces legal, constitutional and practical hurdles
  10. Why is the sky blue?
  11. What’s happening on RedNote? A media scholar explains the app TikTok users are fleeing to – and the cultural moment unfolding there
  12. Texas is already policing the Mexican border − and will play an outsize role in any Trump plan to crack down on immigration
  13. Biden helped bring science out of the lab and into the community − emphasizing research focused on solutions
  14. China tech shrugged off Trump’s ‘trade war’ − there’s no reason it won’t do the same with new tariffs
  15. David Lynch exposed the rot at the heart of American culture
  16. Climate misinformation is rife on social media – and poised to get worse
  17. How do you create a workplace that people want to work in? We embedded in a company to find out
  18. News coverage boosts giving after disasters – Australian research team’s findings may offer lessons for Los Angeles fires
  19. How the literature of fire can help readers find hope among the ashes
  20. The Starbase rocket testing facility is permanently changing the landscape of southern Texas
  21. Tool of faith or digital distraction? Catholic Church offers indulgences to faithful who fast from social media
  22. Acute stress and early signs of PTSD are common in firefighters and other first responders − here’s what to watch out for
  23. Israel-Hamas deal shows limits of US influence – and the unpredictable impact of Trump
  24. How constitutional guardrails have always contained presidential ambitions
  25. MLK’s ‘beloved community’ has inspired social justice work for decades − what did he mean?
  26. Civil servants brace for a second Trump presidency
  27. How Trump could try to stay in power after his second term ends
  28. The US ambassador to the UN is tasked with doing a careful dance between Washington and the world
  29. Soaring wealth inequality has remade the map of American prosperity
  30. Joe Biden leaves a complicated legacy on the federal courts
  31. How America courted increasingly destructive wildfires − and what that means for protecting homes today
  32. Bird flu flares up again in Michigan poultry – an infectious disease expert explains the risk to humans, chickens, cows and other animals
  33. Community savings groups in Uganda are good stewards of local people’s money – and of outsiders’ funds too, research shows
  34. This course examines Israeli school division to better understand education policy – and society – in the US
  35. The Gilded Age novel that helps explain our fascination with Luigi Mangione
  36. Bezos’ Blue Origin has successfully launched its New Glenn rocket to orbit − a feat 15 years in the making
  37. White House Office of Science and Technology Policy provides in-house science advice for the president
  38. Gaza ceasefire and hostage deal: Why now and what next?
  39. Biden’s move to remove Cuba from terror list continues ‘yo-yo’ policy likely to be reversed by Trump
  40. LA fires: Harm from long-term exposure to wildfire smoke is poorly understood − and it’s a growing risk
  41. LA fires: Long-term exposure to wildfire smoke is a growing health risk, and not well understood
  42. Universities are mapping where local news outlets are still thriving − and where gaps persist
  43. A national, nonpartisan study of the Los Angeles fires could improve planning for future disasters
  44. Meta shift from fact-checking to crowdsourcing spotlights competing approaches in fight against misinformation and hate speech
  45. Joe Biden’s record on science and tech: Investments and regulation for vaccines, broadband, microchips and AI
  46. Insurance for natural disasters is failing homeowners − I don’t have the answers, but I do know the right questions to ask
  47. Kamala Harris memes questioning her cultural background highlight Americans’ contradictions with race
  48. In eyeing Greenland, Trump is echoing long-held American designs on the Arctic expanse
  49. Catholic cardinals play a key role in secular politics as well as the Catholic Church–and the importance of Pope Francis’ choice to head the church in DC
  50. Spending, regulations and DOGE: Office of Management and Budget director plays vital role helping government get stuff done