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Was the coronavirus outbreak an intelligence failure?

  • Written by Erik J. Dahl, Associate Professor of National Security Affairs, Naval Postgraduate School
imageDan Coats, left, then director of national intelligence, told Congress in 2019 about the potential danger of a pandemic.Office of the Director of National Intelligence

As the coronavirus pandemic continues to unfold, it’s clear that having better information sooner, and acting more quickly on what was known, could have slowed the spread of...

Read more: Was the coronavirus outbreak an intelligence failure?

What is a derecho? An atmospheric scientist explains these rare but dangerous storm systems

  • Written by Russ Schumacher, Associate Professor of Atmospheric Science and Colorado State Climatologist, Colorado State University
imageA derecho moves across central Kansas on July 3, 2005.Jim Reed/Corbis via Getty Images

Thunderstorms are common across North America, especially in warm weather months. About 10% of them become severe, meaning they produce hail 1 inch or greater in diameter, winds gusting in excess of 50 knots (57.5 miles per hour), or a tornado.

The U.S. recently...

Read more: What is a derecho? An atmospheric scientist explains these rare but dangerous storm systems

Police unions are one of the biggest obstacles to transforming policing

  • Written by Jill McCorkel, Professor of Sociology and Criminology, Villanova University
imageProtesters in front of Boston Police Headquarters during a United Against Racist Police Terror Rally on June 7, 2020. Matthew J. Lee/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

Protesters and community organizers are increasingly calling for defunding and disbanding the police as a way to end police violence.

Advocates argue that moderate reforms like...

Read more: Police unions are one of the biggest obstacles to transforming policing

Video: How simple math can help predict the melting of sea ice

  • Written by Anurag Papolu, Multimedia Editor
imageThe new model predicts the growth of small ponds on arctic ice sheetsScientific Visualization Studio / NASA

To better predict climate change, scientists need accurate models which predict the behavior of many natural processes. One of these is the melting of arctic sea ice, which requires expensive and difficult data collection in the Arctic.

Physic...

Read more: Video: How simple math can help predict the melting of sea ice

Why stocks are soaring even as coronavirus cases surge, at least 20 million remain unemployed and the US sinks into recession

  • Written by Jonathan T. Fluharty-Jaidee, Assistant Department Chair and Professor of Finance, West Virginia University
imageThrowing cash at the problem seems to help – investors at least.elenabs/Getty Images

The number of new COVID-19 cases in the U.S. is still climbing rapidly, over 20 million Americans remain unemployed, dozens of major companies have reportedly filed for bankruptcy, the country is officially in a recession and there’s still no vaccine in...

Read more: Why stocks are soaring even as coronavirus cases surge, at least 20 million remain unemployed and...

Churchgoers aren't able to lift every voice and sing during the pandemic – here's why that matters

  • Written by Donna M. Cox, Professor of Music, University of Dayton
imageEven when singing does take place, voices are muffled.Alex Edelman/AFP via Getty Images

Because of COVID-19, churches no longer reverberate with song; hymnals are neatly stacked and projection screens blank. Even as church leaders plan for reopening, scientists warn that it might be too early to resume singing in groups.

Though such restrictions...

Read more: Churchgoers aren't able to lift every voice and sing during the pandemic – here's why that matters

A short history of black women and police violence

  • Written by Keisha N. Blain, Associate Professor of History, University of Pittsburgh
imageA protester holds up a sign with Breonna Taylor's name. Taylor was killed by police officers on March 13.Brett Carlsen/Getty Images

Just after midnight on March 13, 2020, Breonna Taylor, an EMT in Louisville, Kentucky, was shot and killed by police officers who raided her home.

The officers had entered her home without warning as part of a drug...

Read more: A short history of black women and police violence

Am I immune to COVID-19 if I have antibodies?

  • Written by William Petri, Professor of Medicine, University of Virginia
imageFor those who have suffered from COVID-19, do their antibodies guarantee immunity from subsequent disease?SEBASTIAN KAULITZKI / Getty Images

Perhaps the most important question now about COVID-19 is the degree to which a prior infection protects from a second infection by the new coronavirus. This affects vaccine development and herd immunity and...

Read more: Am I immune to COVID-19 if I have antibodies?

High-tech surveillance amplifies police bias and overreach

  • Written by Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, Professor of Law, American University
imagePolice forces have a wide range of options for monitoring individuals and crowds.Nicholas Kaeser/Flickr, CC BY-NC

Video of police in riot gear clashing with unarmed protesters in the wake of the killing of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin has filled social media feeds. Meanwhile, police surveillance of protesters has...

Read more: High-tech surveillance amplifies police bias and overreach

Students demand removal of 'mild racist' from Georgia landscape

  • Written by Kathy Roberts Forde, Associate Professor, Journalism Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst
imagePeople raise their fists outside Atlanta City Hall during a protest over the death of George Floyd on June 6, 2020. Elijah Nouvelage/Getty Images

Following the lead of African American activists, a coalition of young people has taken to the streets to protest police brutality and systemic racism across the country. Protesters in the South have...

Read more: Students demand removal of 'mild racist' from Georgia landscape

More Articles ...

  1. China's efforts to win hearts and minds with aid and investment may make all the difference if there's a cold war with the US
  2. How DC Mayor Bowser used graffiti to protect public space
  3. More people eat frog legs than you think – and humans are harvesting frogs at unsustainable rates
  4. What colleges and universities can do to improve police-community relations
  5. Could China's strategic pork reserve be a model for the US?
  6. How 'Karen' went from a popular baby name to a stand-in for white entitlement
  7. Why soldiers might disobey the president's orders to occupy US cities
  8. Who killed Sweden's prime minister? 1986 assassination of Olof Palme is finally solved – maybe
  9. During Floyd protests, media industry reckons with long history of collaboration with law enforcement
  10. Neighborhood-based friendships making a comeback for kids in the age of coronavirus
  11. Is it safe to stay in a hotel, cabin or rental home yet?
  12. Adding women to corporate boards improves decisions about medical product safety
  13. Going online due to COVID-19 this fall could hurt colleges' future
  14. Globalization really started 1,000 years ago
  15. Globalization really started 1,000 years ago
  16. State prosecutors and voters – not the feds – can hold corrupt officials accountable
  17. First space tourists will face big risks, as private companies gear up for paid suborbital flights
  18. Life on welfare isn't what most people think it is
  19. City compost programs turn garbage into 'black gold' that boosts food security and social justice
  20. COVID-19 is deadlier for black Brazilians, a legacy of structural racism that dates back to slavery
  21. How the Federal Reserve literally makes money
  22. Why some nursing homes are better than others at protecting residents and staff from COVID-19
  23. Want to stop the COVID-19 stress meltdown? Train your brain
  24. Could pressure for COVID-19 drugs lead the FDA to lower its standards?
  25. The stay-at-home slowdown – how the pandemic upended our perception of time
  26. Cuba's clean rivers show the benefits of reducing nutrient pollution
  27. How the US government sold the Peace Corps to the American public
  28. Indian philosophy helps us see clearly, act wisely in an interconnected world
  29. Are religious communities reviving the revival? In the US, outdoor worship has a long tradition
  30. Militias evaluate beliefs, action as president threatens soldiers in the streets
  31. What – or who – is antifa?
  32. COVID-19's deadliness for men is revealing why researchers should have been studying immune system sex differences years ago
  33. Coronavirus deaths and those of George Floyd and Ahmaud Arbery have something in common: Racism
  34. States are making it harder to sue nursing homes over COVID-19: Why immunity from lawsuits is a problem
  35. Supreme Court phoning it in means better arguments, more public engagement
  36. Scientific fieldwork 'caught in the middle' of US-Mexico border tensions
  37. Workplaces are turning to devices to monitor social distancing, but does the tech respect privacy?
  38. What we can learn about isolation from prison artists
  39. Using the military to quash protests can erode democracy – as Latin America well knows
  40. Unicorn Riot’s protest coverage recalls long history of grassroots video production
  41. 19 facts about the 19th Amendment on its 100th anniversary
  42. Fear of needles could be a hurdle to COVID-19 vaccination, but here are ways to overcome it
  43. Star player who expressed interest in going to an HBCU may shake up how athletes select a college
  44. Vibrators had a long history as medical quackery before feminists rebranded them as sex toys
  45. 2020 uprisings, unprecedented in scope, join a long river of struggle in America
  46. The good-guy image police present to students often clashes with students' reality
  47. Video: A place for people to pray and birds to sing
  48. Trump's use of religion follows playbook of authoritarian-leaning leaders the world over
  49. Venezuelan migrants face crime, conflict and coronavirus at Colombia’s closed border
  50. Minneapolis' 'long, hot summer' of '67 – and the parallels to today's protests over police brutality