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Why is the US Green Party so irrelevant?

  • Written by Per Urlaub, Associate Professor of German Studies, University of Texas at Austin
imageniXerKG/Flickr, CC BY-NC

Many Americans value environmental protection and want to see more of it. But Jill Stein, the Green Party presidential candidate, is drawing only 1 to 3 percent in recent polls, even in an election where many voters dislike the major candidates and are looking for alternatives.

Stein certainly has worked to differentiate...

Read more: Why is the US Green Party so irrelevant?

Digital health devices are great, but their prices are widening the health gap

  • Written by Quianta Moore, Scholar in Health Policy, Rice University
imageCouple using in-home blood pressure monitor. From www.shuttertock.com

Chronic conditions such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes and chronic respiratory diseases account for more than 85 percent of all deaths in the United States. Obesity and asthma in particular are among the leading causes of preventable deaths in the United States and...

Read more: Digital health devices are great, but their prices are widening the health gap

How to involve more women and girls in engineering

  • Written by Carolyn Conner Seepersad, Associate Professor of Mechanical Engineering, University of Texas at Austin
imageLet's see how this works.Cockrell School of Engineering, University of Texas at Austin, CC BY-NC

As millions of students of all ages return to school this fall, they are making important choices that have a strong influence on their eventual career path – which college majors to pursue, which high school classes to take, even which elementary...

Read more: How to involve more women and girls in engineering

Why do science issues seem to divide us along party lines?

  • Written by Lauren Griffin, Co-Director of Research for frank and Manager of the Journal of Public Interest Communications, College of Journalism and Communications, University of Florida
imageThere's more to it than political beliefs.Buttons image via www.shutterstock.com.

Much has been made about the predictable partisan split between presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump on issues of science and public policy. But what about their supporters? Can Americans really be that far apart in terms of science?

That liberals...

Read more: Why do science issues seem to divide us along party lines?

Why inequality is the most important economic challenge facing the next president

  • Written by Steven Pressman, Professor of Economics, Colorado State University
imageU.S. middle class, R.I.P.?Middle class demise via www.shutterstock.com

In a recent issue of The Economist, President Barack Obama set out four major economic issues that his successor must tackle. As he put it:

“… restoring faith in an economy where hardworking Americans can get ahead requires addressing four major structural...

Read more: Why inequality is the most important economic challenge facing the next president

Brexit and Trump are bad for our health

  • Written by Elizabeth Radin, Associate Research Scientist, Columbia University

Politics in America and Europe may be increasingly isolationist, but deadly pathogens aren’t. Votes for Brexit and Donald Trump may in fact be votes for worsening pandemics and fewer doctors and researchers to fight them.

This summer Brits chose to leave the EU and Americans nominated Trump as the Republican Party candidate. On both sides of...

Read more: Brexit and Trump are bad for our health

Evangelical Christians are on the left too

  • Written by Timothy J. Williams, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, University of Oregon

On Oct. 3, Longwood University, a public university in Virginia, hosted the first and only 2016 vice presidential debate. In what were described as the debate’s “most sincere” and “most honest” moments, Senator Tim Kaine (D-VA) and Governor Mike Pence (R-IN) discussed their religious faiths.

Pence, a...

Read more: Evangelical Christians are on the left too

Why newspaper endorsements might matter more in this election

  • Written by Agustin Casas, Assistant Professor of Organization and Business Management, CUNEF

What do The Houston Chronicle, The Dallas Morning News, The Cincinnati Enquirer and The Columbus Dispatch have in common?

They’ve all broken from their tradition of endorsing Republican nominees and have endorsed Hillary Clinton for president.

On the same note, The Chicago Tribune, USA Today and The Atlantic have also done something new this...

Read more: Why newspaper endorsements might matter more in this election

Thousands of people didn't evacuate before Hurricane Matthew. Why not?

  • Written by Jennifer Horney, Associate Professor of Epidemiology and Biostatictics, Texas A&M University
imagePost-Matthew flooding in eastern North CarolinaU.S. Army National Guard/Flickr, CC BY-ND

As Hurricane Matthew approached the Atlantic coast earlier this month, more than 2.5 million people were told to evacuate in Florida, Georgia, South Carolina and North Carolina. Further orders were issued last week in eastern North Carolina, where devastating...

Read more: Thousands of people didn't evacuate before Hurricane Matthew. Why not?

No, Bob Dylan isn't the first lyricist to win the Nobel

  • Written by Alex Lubet, Morse Alumni Distinguished Teaching Professor of Music, University of Minnesota
imageA portrait of Indian poet and musician Rabindranath Tagore.Cherishsantosh/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

There’s been a great deal of excitement over Bob Dylan winning the 2016 Nobel Prize for Literature. It’s rare for artists who have achieved widespread, mainstream popularity to win. And although Nobels often go to Americans, the last...

Read more: No, Bob Dylan isn't the first lyricist to win the Nobel

More Articles ...

  1. The Jewish vote may swing key undecided counties, study says
  2. One step toward making criminal justice less biased
  3. We could prevent millions of cancer deaths each year with knowledge we already have
  4. Dems and the GOP are miles apart on yet another issue: Public lands
  5. Straight girls do kiss on campus, but what about those who don't go to college?
  6. Do you buy a smartphone for its curves? Do you buy a car for its cup holders?
  7. What we can learn from Trump’s $916 million loss
  8. Reading, writing and mental health care: why schools need added services
  9. Weather forecasters can't manipulate hurricane warnings — here's why
  10. Should I grade-skip my gifted child?
  11. Latino voters respond to outreach, not insults
  12. Fixing US elections
  13. Is it time for a new model to fund science research in higher education?
  14. Donald Trump and the dangerous rhetoric of portraying people as objects
  15. Donald Trump is taking a page from Reconstruction-era white supremacists
  16. Where the parties stand on environmental regulation: Six essential reads
  17. Getting to yes in Colombia: What it would take to reintegrate the FARC
  18. Love it or hate it, Obamacare has expanded coverage for millions
  19. Do we swear too much?
  20. After our universe's cosmic dawn, what happened to all its original hydrogen?
  21. Beyond Olympic gold: US kids getting lapped in aerobic fitness
  22. Nobel prize-winning autophagy research laid groundwork for potential Parkinson's treatment
  23. Why is taking photographs banned in many museums and historic places?
  24. Columbus Day: Black legend meets White City
  25. What if nature, like corporations, had the rights and protections of a person?
  26. Trump vs. Clinton: Three key moments from the second debate
  27. Physicists explore exotic states of matter inspired by Nobel-winning research
  28. The curious history of the Nobel Peace Prize
  29. António Guterres to be the next UN Secretary-General: Good choice, bad process
  30. Fighting another war: How many military personnel and veterans will have PTSD in 2025?
  31. 'Deepwater Horizon' honors oil rig workers but oversimplifies the blowout
  32. When catastrophe strikes, who foots the bill?
  33. The oppressive seeds of the Colin Kaepernick backlash
  34. Latest jobs report shows why Congress needs to get into the game
  35. Don't shoot the messenger: How RNA could keep us young
  36. Basic income after automation? That’s not how capitalism works!
  37. How Wells Fargo encouraged employees to commit fraud
  38. A military view on climate change: It's eroding our national security and we should prepare for it
  39. Can great apes read your mind?
  40. Clinton and Trump need to address police violence in debate
  41. Play video games, advance science
  42. The opioid epidemic: Six essential reads
  43. Dear Donald Trump: I treat combat veterans with PTSD, and they are not weak
  44. Terrorism fallout shelters: Is it time to resurrect nuclear civil defense?
  45. Hurricane Matthew approaches the eastern US: Six essential reads
  46. What displaced Colombians living abroad think about the peace efforts
  47. What the Trump Foundation controversies reveal about the candidate and his business acumen
  48. The Nobel Prize for Physics goes to topology – and mathematicians applaud
  49. Why one-size-fits-all approach does not work for teacher quality
  50. In parts of the world, bride price encourages parents to educate daughters