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Water cooperation is essential when countries share lakes and rivers – yet it’s been deteriorating in many places, with serious consequences

  • Written by Susanne Schmeier, Associate Professor of Water Law and Diplomacy, IHE Delft
imageLake Chad once provided adequate livelihoods for 20 million people in Africa, but it lost 90% of its surface area in 30 years.AP Photo/Christophe Ena

Just over half the world’s population shares a river or lake basin with at least one other country. To sustainably manage those water resources for the health of people, ecosystems and...

Read more: Water cooperation is essential when countries share lakes and rivers – yet it’s been deteriorating...

Spanish speakers in Philadelphia break traditional rules of formal and informal speech in signs around town

  • Written by Daniel Guarin, Adjunct professor, Temple University
imageSpanish-language signs in Philadelphia contradict the grammar lessons most of us were taught.Daniel Guarin Buitrago, CC BY-ND

I’ve discovered something fascinating about how Spanish speakers in Philadelphia address each other and communicate through public signs.

The discovery is part of my research on language patterns in Philadelphia –...

Read more: Spanish speakers in Philadelphia break traditional rules of formal and informal speech in signs...

Beatings, overcrowding and food deprivation: US deportees face distressing human rights conditions in El Salvador’s mega-prison

  • Written by Mneesha Gellman, Associate Professor of Political Science, Emerson College
imageShackled and bent over – some of the 250-plus deportees arriving in El Salvador.El Salvador Presidency / Handout/Anadolu via Getty Images

El Salvador President Nayib Bukele framed his offer to house “dangerous American criminals” and “criminals from any country” as a win-win for all.

The fee for transferring detainees...

Read more: Beatings, overcrowding and food deprivation: US deportees face distressing human rights conditions...

Trump is using the Alien Enemies Act to deport immigrants – but the 18th-century law has been invoked only during times of war

  • Written by Daniel Tichenor, Professor of Political Science, University of Oregon
imagePrison guards transfer alleged Venezuelan gang members to a detention center in Tecoluca, El Salvador, on March 16, 2025. El Salvador presidential press office via AP

As President Donald Trump often promised during his 2024 presidential campaign, on March 15, 2025, he invoked an obscure 18th-century law called the Alien Enemies Act to justify...

Read more: Trump is using the Alien Enemies Act to deport immigrants – but the 18th-century law has been...

Cells lining your skin and organs can generate electricity when injured − potentially opening new doors to treating wounds

  • Written by Sun-Min Yu, Postdoctoral Research Fellow in Polymer Science and Engineering, UMass Amherst
imageYour skin cells can generate electricity when wounded.Torsten Wittmann, University of California, San Francisco/NIH via Flickr, CC BY-NC

Your cells constantly generate and conduct electricity that runs through your body to perform various functions. One such example of this bioelectricity is the nerve signals that power thoughts in your brain....

Read more: Cells lining your skin and organs can generate electricity when injured − potentially opening new...

Researchers created sound that can bend itself through space, reaching only your ear in a crowd

  • Written by Jiaxin Zhong, Postdoctoral Researcher in Acoustics, Penn State
imageFor your ears only.Cinefootage Visuals/iStock via Getty Images Plus

What if you could listen to music or a podcast without headphones or earbuds and without disturbing anyone around you? Or have a private conversation in public without other people hearing you?

Our newly published research introduces a way to create audible enclaves –...

Read more: Researchers created sound that can bend itself through space, reaching only your ear in a crowd

Washington Post’s turnaround on its opinion pages is returning journalism to its partisan roots − but without the principles

  • Written by Joseph Jones, Assistant Professor of Media Ethics and Law at Reed College of Media, West Virginia University
imageOwner Jeff Bezos has made big changes to The Washington Post's editorial pages.Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

Jeff Bezos, the world’s third-richest person and owner of The Washington Post, announced in February 2025 significant changes to the editorial pages of his Pulitzer-Prize winning newspaper.

The editorial section, also called the opinion...

Read more: Washington Post’s turnaround on its opinion pages is returning journalism to its partisan roots −...

What is the rules-based order? How this global system has shifted from ‘liberal’ origins − and where it could be heading next

  • Written by Andrew Latham, Professor of Political Science, Macalester College
imageGlobal order? Put a pin in it.Getty Images

The phrase “international rules-based order” has long been a fixture in global politics.

Western leaders often use it to describe a framework of rules, norms and institutions designed to guide state behavior. Advocates argue that this framework has provided the foundation for decades of...

Read more: What is the rules-based order? How this global system has shifted from ‘liberal’ origins − and...

Colorado and other states have expanded access to abortion, but not for adolescents

  • Written by Kate Coleman-Minahan, Associate Professor of Nursing, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus

Since 2022, Colorado and 10 other states have passed voter initiatives to protect or expand abortion access. Yet, seven of these states, including Colorado, require people under the age of 18 to get consent from or notify a parent prior to receiving abortion services.

In January 2025, my colleagues and I published research using in-depth...

Read more: Colorado and other states have expanded access to abortion, but not for adolescents

Fewer deaths, new substances and evolving treatments in Philly’s opioid epidemic − 4 essential reads

  • Written by Kate Kilpatrick, Philadelphia Editor
imageOpioid overdose deaths in Philly dropped in 2023. Data for 2024 has not yet been released. Jeff Fusco/The Conversation U.S., CC BY-NC-SA

In Philadelphia, fatal overdoses are the No. 3 cause of death after heart disease and cancer. That’s been the case each year since 2016, except in 2020 and 2021 when COVID-19 deaths outpaced overdose deaths....

Read more: Fewer deaths, new substances and evolving treatments in Philly’s opioid epidemic − 4 essential reads

More Articles ...

  1. Remembering China’s Empress Dowager Ling, a Buddhist who paved the way for future female rulers
  2. From pulpits to protest, the surprising history of the phrase ‘pride and prejudice’
  3. The US military has cared about climate change since the dawn of the Cold War – for good reason
  4. Museums have tons of data, and AI could make it more accessible − but standardizing and organizing it across fields won’t be easy
  5. What was the first thing scientists discovered? A historian makes the case for Babylonian astronomy
  6. Trump’s first term polarized teens’ views on racism and inequality
  7. Why was it hard for the GOP – which controls Congress – to pass its spending bill?
  8. Saudi Arabia’s role as Ukraine war mediator advances Gulf nation’s diplomatic rehabilitation − and boosts its chances of a seat at the table should Iran-US talks resume
  9. See you in the funny papers: How superhero comics tell the story of Jewish America
  10. Radioisotope generators − inside the ‘nuclear batteries’ that power faraway spacecraft
  11. The psychology behind anti-trans legislation: How cognitive biases shape thoughts and policy
  12. Big cuts at the Education Department’s civil rights office will affect vulnerable students for years to come
  13. When algorithms take the field – inside MLB’s robo-umping experiment
  14. Simple strategies can boost vaccination rates for adults over 65 − new study
  15. The push to restore semiconductor manufacturing faces a labor crisis − can the US train enough workers in time?
  16. When humans use AI to earn patents, who is doing the inventing?
  17. Why parents of ‘twice-exceptional’ children choose homeschooling over public school
  18. Environmental protection laws still apply even under Trump’s national energy emergency − here’s why
  19. Are Ukrainians ready for ceasefire and concessions? Here’s what the polls say
  20. Philly Roller Derby league turns 20 - here’s how the sport skated its way to feminism, anti-racism and queer liberation
  21. How an unexpected observation, a 10th-century recipe and an explorer’s encounter with a cabbage thief upend what we know about collard greens’ journey to the American South
  22. I study refugees, and here are the facts on the history and impact of refugee resettlement in the US
  23. You’ve likely heard the Serenity Prayer − but not its backstory
  24. 3D printing will help space pioneers make homes, tools and other stuff they need to colonize the Moon and Mars
  25. Can the Trump administration legally deport Palestinian rights advocate Mahmoud Khalil? 3 things to know about green card holders’ rights
  26. America’s clean air rules have boosted health and the economy − here’s what EPA’s deregulation spree ignores
  27. America’s clean air rules boost health and the economy − here’s what EPA’s new deregulation plans ignore
  28. Mass layoffs at Education Department signal Trump’s plan to gut the agency
  29. Is the US heading for a government shutdown? 5 essential reads to occupy the mind while we wait to find out
  30. How do researchers determine how toxic a chemical is? A toxicologist explains alternatives to animal testing
  31. The fediverse promises social media without Big Tech – if it can avoid familiar pitfalls
  32. For superfans, comic-con culture is more than fun – it’s sacred, a sociologist explains
  33. Alien and Sedition Acts were reviled in their time, and John Adams was not sorry to see them go
  34. Pennsylvania’s mushroom industry faces urgent labor shortage − and latest immigration policies will likely make it worse
  35. US workers with remote-friendly jobs are still working from home nearly half the time, 5 years after the pandemic began
  36. How Jesse Jackson embodied Southern politics − and changed American elections
  37. The parallels between Kash Patel and William J. Burns, a scandal-mongering 1920s FBI director — an FBI historian explains
  38. Middle age is a time when women are vulnerable to eating disorders
  39. Arrest of ex-president Duterte will shake up dynastic politics in the Philippines – and hand initiative to rival Marcos family
  40. US-Ukraine deal highlights Ukraine’s wealth of critical minerals, but extracting them isn’t so simple
  41. The world regulated sulfur in ship fuels − and the lightning stopped
  42. 5 years of COVID-19 underscore value of coordinated efforts to manage disease – while CDC, NIH and WHO face threats to their ability to respond to a crisis
  43. What is a SLAPP suit? Legal experts explain how these lawsuits suppress free speech
  44. How Trump’s foreign aid and diplomatic cuts will make it harder for the US to wield soft power to maintain its friendships and win new ones
  45. Mission possible − parastronaut programs can make space travel more inclusive and attainable for all
  46. From TB to HIV/AIDS to cancer, disease tracking has always had a political dimension, but it’s the foundation of public health
  47. End-of-life planning can be hampered by misconceptions − but the process is easier than you might think
  48. Trump’s DOGE campaign accelerates 50-year trend of government privatization
  49. What happens when leaders have loyalists in charge of men with guns: Lessons for the US from Nicaragua, Syria and other authoritarian countries
  50. The sun is setting on government transparency in Florida – and secrecy creep is affecting the rest of the US, too