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Making life-or-death decisions is very hard – here's how we've taught people to do it better

  • Written by Laurence Alison, Director of the Centre for Critical and Major Incident Psychology, University of Liverpool
When faced with a wildfire, responders must act quickly and decisively to save lives.AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez

When faced with a rapidly advancing fire threatening a community, it can be hard to know how best to save lives.

Is a rapid evacuation better, or is it safer for residents to stay where they are? The whole situation can change in an...

Read more: Making life-or-death decisions is very hard – here's how we've taught people to do it better

Plague was around for millennia before epidemics took hold – and the way people lived might be what protected them

  • Written by Sonja Eliason, MPhil Candidate in Bioscience Enterprise, University of Cambridge
What happened to make plague able to cause devastating epidemics?Everett Historical/Shutterstock.com

One of civilization’s most prolific killers shadowed humans for thousands of years without their knowledge.

The bacteria Yersinia pestis, which causes the plague, is thought to be responsible for up to 200 million deaths across human history...

Read more: Plague was around for millennia before epidemics took hold – and the way people lived might be...

Anti-Semitism in the US today is a variation on an old theme

  • Written by Pamela S. Nadell, Professor and Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women's & Gender History and Director of the Jewish Studies Program, American University
Despite courting the Jewish vote, President Trump has used anti-Semitic rhetoric.AP/John Locher

Senators Jacky Rosen and James Lankford, who describe themselves as “a practicing Jewish Democrat from Nevada and a devoted Christian Republican from Oklahoma,” are spearheading a new effort to fight an old problem: anti-Semitism in America.

Th...

Read more: Anti-Semitism in the US today is a variation on an old theme

Evangelicals in Brazil see abuse of God's earth as a sin – but will they fight to save the Amazon?

  • Written by Amy Erica Smith, Associate Professor of Political Science as well as Liberal Arts and Sciences Dean's Professor, Iowa State University
Trees that survived a forest fire stand amid smoldering smoke in the Vila Nova Samuel region of Brazil, Aug. 25, 2019. AP Photo/Eraldo Peres

When the Brazilian city of São Paulo abruptly went dark at midday on Aug. 19, there was talk of the Apocalypsenot all of it in jest.

In fact, meteorologists explained, unusual wind patterns had...

Read more: Evangelicals in Brazil see abuse of God's earth as a sin – but will they fight to save the Amazon?

Many states now require anti-bullying training that includes a focus on LGBTQ students - but risks remain

  • Written by Daniel A Cinotti, Associate Professor of School Counseling and Director of Counseling Programs, New York Institute of Technology
Tyler Clementi's 2010 death inspired anti-bullying efforts.AP Photo/Mel Evans

Dharun Ravi spent spent weeks gossiping with his friends about the sexual orientation of his freshman roommate at Rutgers University in New Brunswick, New Jersey. Initially, he texted and used social media.

His roommate, Tyler Clementi, eventually learned that Ravi had...

Read more: Many states now require anti-bullying training that includes a focus on LGBTQ students - but risks...

To solve the hidden epidemic of teen hunger, we should listen to teens who experience it

  • Written by Stephanie Clintonia Boddie, Assistant Professor of Church and Community Ministries, Baylor University
Millions of America's youth experience food insecurity.pathdoc/Shutterstock.com

For many young people, the toughest choice they will ever have to make about food is what to eat at home or what to choose from a menu.

But for Texas high schoolers Tamiya, Juliana, Trisha, Cara and Kristen, the choices they have to make about food are more difficult....

Read more: To solve the hidden epidemic of teen hunger, we should listen to teens who experience it

Battlefields around the world are finding new purpose as parks and refuges

  • Written by Todd Lookingbill, Associate Professor of Geography and the Environment, University of Richmond
Antietam National Battlefield, Pennsylvania, site of a savage Civil War battle on Sept. 17, 1862.NPS

The horrors of war are all too familiar: lives lost, homes destroyed, entire communities forced to flee. Yet as time passes, places that once were sites of death and destruction can become peaceful natural refuges.

One of the deadliest battles...

Read more: Battlefields around the world are finding new purpose as parks and refuges

Health care workers wanted: A veteran needs you to work at a VA hospital

  • Written by Sanjay Saint, George Dock Professor of Medicine, University of Michigan
Vietnam veteran Marvin Nolin of Dover, Tenn., visits the Poppy Wall of Honor on the National Mall in Washington, Friday, May 24, 2019.Carolyn Kaster/AP Photo

Flying home from Florida recently, I was seated across the aisle from an elderly man wearing a hat identifying himself as a Marine. His wife sat next to him and helped him store his cane in...

Read more: Health care workers wanted: A veteran needs you to work at a VA hospital

Before you decide to work in college, ask yourself these questions

  • Written by Laura Perna, Professor of Higher Education, University of Pennsylvania
Working in college helps pay the bills, but working too many hours can bring some ill effects, research shows.GaudiLab

For many undergraduates, working for pay during the academic year is a necessary part of the college experience. If they don’t work while enrolled, they may not have the money needed to pay tuition and other fees, keep a roof...

Read more: Before you decide to work in college, ask yourself these questions

More Articles ...

  1. Curious Kids: What is a whistleblower?
  2. American youth don't know much about the juvenile justice system
  3. NASA's TESS spacecraft is finding hundreds of exoplanets – and is poised to find thousands more
  4. Does the Civil Rights Act protect LGBT workers? The Supreme Court is about to decide
  5. Why Joe Biden was denied communion at a church
  6. California is living America's dystopian future
  7. Homicide is declining around the world – but why?
  8. 3 reasons Midwest farmers hurt by the U.S.-China trade war still support Trump
  9. As the coal industry shrinks, miners deserve a just transition – here's what it should include
  10. World Vision tinkers with its 70-year-old child sponsorship model
  11. Curious Kids: Why do feet stink by the end of the day?
  12. Mississippi governor's race taking place under Jim Crow-era rules after judge refuses to block them
  13. 'Joker' fans flocking to a Bronx stairway highlights tension of media tourism
  14. DeVos' formula for success: Trash public schools and push privatization
  15. Yes, the research confirms: Managers shouldn't sleep with subordinates
  16. California wildfires signal the arrival of a planetary fire age
  17. McDonald's fired its CEO for sleeping with an employee – research shows why even consensual office romances can be a problem
  18. Why doesn't the US just send Anne Sacoolas back to the UK? Here's what's at stake in this dispute over diplomatic immunity
  19. Don't make intimate violence victims look for help -- research shows they fare better when police and community organizations coordinate assistance
  20. What really causes home field advantage – and why it's on the decline
  21. Cada vez más universidades en EEUU rechazan los examenes estandarizados para admitir alumnos
  22. Website privacy options aren't much of a choice since they're hard to find and use
  23. Curious Kids: Why does pizza taste so good?
  24. Will the NCAA's move to let college athletes get paid endorsements make a difference? 3 questions answered
  25. Monsanto wins $7.7b lawsuit in Brazil – but farmers' fight to stop its ‘amoral’ royalty system will continue
  26. How much of a difference does the number of kids in a classroom make?
  27. Impeachment resolution: 3 reasons the House voted even though the Constitution doesn't require it
  28. Could Congress reverse Trump's decision to pull troops out of Syria?
  29. Why the Fed has no choice but to keep cutting interest rates – if it wants to avoid a financial crisis
  30. What a boycott that never happened can reveal about blame, consumer psychology and the free-market system
  31. Super-soldier T-cells fight cancer better after a transformational DNA delivery
  32. Meditation apps might calm you -- but miss the point of Buddhist mindfulness
  33. Will killing Al-Baghdadi give Trump a boost in the polls? Probably, but it won't last
  34. Democrat or Republican, Americans are angry, frustrated and overwhelmed
  35. At these championship-winning schools, coaches sacrifice time and money for players to beat the odds
  36. 'The Current War: Director's Cut' shows how the electric power system we take for granted came to be
  37. Is it ethical for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to accept a $1 million prize? Yes, but it's hard to explain
  38. What western states can learn from Native American wildfire management strategies
  39. Rabies' horrifying symptoms inspired folktales of humans turned into werewolves, vampires and other monsters
  40. Is the US losing the artificial intelligence arms race?
  41. The EPA disbanded our clean air science panel. We met anyway – and found that particle pollution regulations aren't protecting public health
  42. Before Martin Luther, there was Erasmus – a Dutch theologian who paved the way for the Protestant Reformation
  43. Lebanon uprising unites people across faiths, defying deep sectarian divides
  44. Half a billion on Halloween pet costumes is latest sign of America's out-of-control consumerism
  45. Zombie flu: How the 1919 influenza pandemic fueled the rise of the living dead
  46. Why we love big, blood-curdling screams
  47. The scariest part of Halloween may be costume contact lenses, an eye doctor says
  48. A good night’s sleep, a long-sought dream for sleep apnea patients, may be in closer reach
  49. Why 'acting locally' is impossible in an interconnected world
  50. What Trump's travel ban really looks like, almost two years in