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What is moral injury in veterans?

  • Written by Holly Arrow, Director, Groups and War Lab, University of Oregon
imageWhat is moral injury?Truthout.org, CC BY-NC-SA

On Memorial Day, Americans remember those who died while in service to the country. In the past five years, a large proportion of these deaths have been suicides.

Popular media often link military suicide with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which does indeed have a documented association with...

Read more: What is moral injury in veterans?

Yale grad students' hunger strike can't turn the tide for labor

  • Written by Raymond Hogler, Professor of Management, Colorado State University
imageProtesters holding a candlelight vigil at Yale President Salovey's home.Local 33 UNITE HERE

On April 24, graduate students at Yale University announced a hunger strike in support of Local 33 of Unite Here, a labor union that represents workers in a variety of industries (including higher education) in dozens of cities across North America.

Their...

Read more: Yale grad students' hunger strike can't turn the tide for labor

Brazil's tide against corruption swells

  • Written by Susan Rose-Ackerman, Henry R. Luce Professor of Jurisprudence (Law and Political Science), Yale University
imageCalls for Brazilian President Michel Temer's ouster are growing louder due to allegations of government corruption.Pilar Olivares/Reuters

Brazil’s political turmoil is going into overdrive, exacerbated in recent days by the discovery of a tape recording allegedly of President Michel Temer approving some US$600,000 in hush money to pay off a...

Read more: Brazil's tide against corruption swells

Should spies use secret software vulnerabilities?

  • Written by Nir Kshetri, Professor of Management, University of North Carolina – Greensboro
imageWhen is it okay for the government to keep a secret?sharpshutter via shutterstock.com

The recent WannaCry ransomware attack infected about 300,000 computers in 150 countries, and cost computer users thousands of dollars in ransom money and billions in lost productivity.

The attack took advantage of a vulnerability in the Windows operating system...

Read more: Should spies use secret software vulnerabilities?

Understanding tornadoes: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Paul Markowski, Professor of Meteorology, Pennsylvania State University
imageTornado seven miles south of Anadarko, Oklahoma, May 3, 1999.OAR/ERL/National Severe Storms Laboratory/Flickr, CC BY

Editor’s note: May and June are typically peak months for tornadoes in North America. We asked Penn State meteorology professors Paul Markowski and Yvette Richardson to explain why tornadoes form, how to stay safe if...

Read more: Understanding tornadoes: 5 questions answered

Child anxiety and parenting in the Trump era

  • Written by Barbara Milrod, Professor of Psychiatry, Medical College, Cornell University
imageWhat can parents do to help their children manage the political climate?AP Photo/Richard Vogel

“Lucy,” a shy, intelligent six-year-old, missed three days of school because she had stomachaches. The symptoms started the day after Lucy witnessed a loud argument while waiting for the bus with her babysitter. A “scary man”...

Read more: Child anxiety and parenting in the Trump era

When some US firms move production overseas, they also offshore their pollution

  • Written by Yue Maggie Zhou, Assistant Professor of Strategy, Ross School of Business, University of Michigan
imageHeavy gray smog blankets northeastern China, including Beijing and Tianjin, on Dec. 18, 2016 during a five-day air pollution 'red alert.' NASA Earth Observatory

On April 22, as protesters swelled Earth Day rallies in U.S. cities and around the world, President Trump tweeted that he was “committed to keeping our air and water clean but always...

Read more: When some US firms move production overseas, they also offshore their pollution

Trump's global gag order: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Maureen Miller, Professor, Columbia University Medical Center
imageCommunity health workers like these visit patients’ homes in Malawi to help prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV. Baylor College of Medicine Children's Foundation–Malawi/Chris Cox, CC BY-ND

Editor’s note: President Donald Trump recently signed an executive order that media reports say could obstruct nearly US$8.8 billion...

Read more: Trump's global gag order: 5 questions answered

Meet Ebrahim Raisi, the cleric challenging incumbent Rouhani for president of Iran

  • Written by Emily L. Blout, Faculty Fellow, Internet Governance Lab, American University School of Communication

Iranian presidential candidate Ebrahim Raisi is an important newcomer to electoral politics.

Last year, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appointed Raisi custodian of the shrine of Imam Reza and chairman of the foundation that manages its extensive complex. This is no minor post. The foundation nets the regime billions of dollars.

imageThe shrine of...

Read more: Meet Ebrahim Raisi, the cleric challenging incumbent Rouhani for president of Iran

Meet Ebrahim Raisi, the cleric who challenged incumbent Rouhani for president of Iran

  • Written by Emily L. Blout, Faculty Fellow, Internet Governance Lab, American University School of Communication

Iranian presidential candidate Ebrahim Raisi is an important newcomer to electoral politics.

Last year, Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei appointed Raisi custodian of the shrine of Imam Reza and chairman of the foundation that manages its extensive complex. This is no minor post. The foundation nets the regime billions of dollars.

imageThe shrine of...

Read more: Meet Ebrahim Raisi, the cleric who challenged incumbent Rouhani for president of Iran

More Articles ...

  1. Comey isn't the first FBI director to keep memos on a president
  2. Fidget toys aren't just hype
  3. What witch-finders can teach us about today's world
  4. What witch-hunters can teach us about today's world
  5. From Nazis to Netflix, the controversies and contradictions of Cannes
  6. Beyond just promise, CRISPR is delivering in the lab today
  7. Impeachment: It's political
  8. Giraffes are in trouble – the US Endangered Species Act can help
  9. What is classified information, and who gets to decide?
  10. Are movies a good way to learn history?
  11. Why banning laptops from airplane cabins doesn't make sense
  12. Ivanka Trump's deeply political tome
  13. Why Trump's White House leaks
  14. The firing of James Comey: Psychology helps explain what Trump got wrong
  15. Protecting endangered species: 6 essential reads
  16. Why United's culture needs to loosen up to avoid more PR fiascos
  17. Electrically stimulating your brain can boost memory – but here's one reason it doesn't always work
  18. Fainting and the summer heat: Warmer days can make you swoon, so be prepared
  19. The FBI: With great power comes great scandal
  20. On the Reformation's 500th anniversary, remembering Martin Luther's contribution to literacy
  21. Why installing software updates makes us WannaCry
  22. Trump's trade policy is unlikely to deliver big wins for US workers
  23. 4 things to know about North and South Korea
  24. The mall isn't dead -- it’s just changing
  25. Why the US does not have universal health care, while many other countries do
  26. Inoculation theory: Using misinformation to fight misinformation
  27. Should the US stay in the Paris Agreement? A majority of Democrats and Republicans think so
  28. How El Niño forecasts can help prevent cholera deaths in Africa
  29. Mining the moon for rocket fuel to get us to Mars
  30. Before Trump, Mexicans really liked the US
  31. What France and the UK can teach Trump about reviving America's middle class
  32. Why America needs a 'do-over' on Medicaid reform
  33. Are solar and wind really killing coal, nuclear and grid reliability?
  34. The forgotten origins of the modern gay rights movement in WWI
  35. What the 1970 Kent State shootings tell us about universities then and now
  36. Christian sex advice websites offer a peek into evangelical politics
  37. Global ransomware attack reinforces message of Trump's new cybersecurity order
  38. Why dads can't be the dads they want to be
  39. Trump will likely win reelection in 2020
  40. Social media helps officials spot public health threats – but only for the rich?
  41. Comey's firing may end other investigations into 2016 election
  42. Census director's resignation could affect control of Congress after 2020
  43. What's behind the fidget spinner fad?
  44. Five rational arguments why God (very probably) exists
  45. Arguments why God (very probably) exists
  46. Computers to humans: Shall we play a game?
  47. Why Facebook may fuel new mothers' insecurity
  48. Will Trump give working families a break?
  49. Why big-data analysis of police activity is inherently biased
  50. 'Moonlight' schooled Hollywood on race. Can it take on school discipline, too?