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Now under attack, EPA's work on climate change has been going on for decades

  • Written by Greg Dotson, Assistant Professor of Law, University of Oregon
imageThe current EPA administrator says the agency should prioritize clean air and clean water, rather than deal with greenhouse gases. billy_wilson/flickr, CC BY-NC

The Trump administration intends to roll back two pillars of the Obama administration’s climate policy – regulations to limit carbon emissions from vehicles and power plants.

Und...

Read more: Now under attack, EPA's work on climate change has been going on for decades

Why we should not know our own passwords

  • Written by Megan Squire, Professor of Computing Sciences, Elon University
imageWhat if even you didn't know your own password?Password via shutterstock.com

Since 2009, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents have been allowed to search electronic devices carried by citizens or noncitizens as they cross the border into the United States from other countries. More recently, Homeland Security Secretary John Kelly suggested...

Read more: Why we should not know our own passwords

Is the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization?

  • Written by Terje Ostebo, Director of the Center for Global Islamic Studies and associate professor in the Department of Religion and the Center for African Studies, University of Florida
imageA member of the Muslim Brotherhood during Egypt's Freedom and Justice Party convention.Lilian Wagdy, CC BY

The Trump administration as well as Republican lawmakers are seeking to introduce legislation that would designate the Muslim Brotherhood a Foreign Terrorist Organization (FTO).

Many are questioning this move. The fact is that the Muslim...

Read more: Is the Muslim Brotherhood a terrorist organization?

Six years after Fukushima, much of Japan has lost faith in nuclear power

  • Written by Tatsujiro Suzuki, Professor and Director, Research Center for Nuclear Weapons Abolition, Nagasaki University
imageAnti-nuclear demonstration in front of the Japanese Diet, June 22, 2012.Matthias Lambrecht/Flickr, CC BY-NC

Six years have passed since the Fukushima nuclear disaster on March 11, 2011, but Japan is still dealing with its impacts. Decommissioning the damaged Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant poses unprecedented technical challenges. More than 100,000...

Read more: Six years after Fukushima, much of Japan has lost faith in nuclear power

If men are favored in our society, why do they die younger than women?

  • Written by Shervin Assari, Research Investigator of Psychiatry and Public Health, University of Michigan
imageOlder man having chest pain, which could signal a heart attack.From www.shutterstock.com

Women experience higher stress, more chronic disease, more depression, more anxiety and are more likely to be victims of violence. Women earn less than men, and in many countries they don’t have the same human rights as men.

Despite the social inequality w...

Read more: If men are favored in our society, why do they die younger than women?

House plan to replace Obamacare 'has Republican DNA,' especially regarding mandate

  • Written by Geoffrey Joyce, Chair & Associate Professor, Department of Pharmaceutical & Health Economics, University of Southern California
imageHouse Majority Whip Steve Scalise of Louisiana, left, joined by Rep. Phil Roe, R-Tenn., holds up a copy of the original Affordable Care Act bill during a news conference on Capitol Hill, Wed., March 8, 2017. J. Scott Applewhite/AP

Among Obamacare’s many provisions, none was more galling to Republicans than the individual mandate, which...

Read more: House plan to replace Obamacare 'has Republican DNA,' especially regarding mandate

From the mundane to the divine, some of the best-designed products of all time

  • Written by Catherine Anderson, Assistant Professor of Interior Architecture and Design, George Washington University
imagePoul Henningsen's Artichoke Lamp, viewed from below at London's Park Plaza Hotel.Doc Searls/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

A well-designed product equally elevates form and function. It is pleasing to look at, easy to use and solves a common problem.

We reached out to five design professors and posed the following question: What’s the...

Read more: From the mundane to the divine, some of the best-designed products of all time

Largest deportation campaign in US history is no match for Trump's plan

  • Written by Kelly Lytle Hernandez, Associate Professor, History and African-American Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
imageBorder Patrol officers detaining immigrants in a field after a few local raids.U.S. Border Patrol Museum

On the campaign trail, Donald Trump vowed that if he was elected president, he would resurrect Operation Wetback of 1954. Operation Wetback, the story goes, was the single largest deportation campaign in U.S. history, resulting in more than one...

Read more: Largest deportation campaign in US history is no match for Trump's plan

Want to help Chicago's youth? Pay more attention to the effect of violence on police

  • Written by Eileen M. Ahlin, Assistant Professor, Criminal Justice, Pennsylvania State University
imageChicago Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson (right) with protestor on Aug. 5, 2016.AP Photo/Tae-Gyun Kim

The recently published Department of Justice investigation of the Chicago Police Department uncovered unsettling uses of force.

Based on a 13-month investigation, the report details how the officers in the nation’s third-largest police...

Read more: Want to help Chicago's youth? Pay more attention to the effect of violence on police

The WikiLeaks CIA release: When will we learn?

  • Written by Richard Forno, Senior Lecturer, Cybersecurity & Internet Researcher, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageThe world is searching – will we protect ourselves?Graphic via shutterstock.com

This week’s WikiLeaks release of what is apparently a trove of Central Intelligence Agency information related to its computer hacking should surprise no one: Despite its complaints of being targeted by cyberattackers from other countries, the U.S. does a...

Read more: The WikiLeaks CIA release: When will we learn?

More Articles ...

  1. Why Trump’s 'skinny' budget is already dead
  2. We don't need to double world food production by 2050 – here's why
  3. A look at the House health care plan through the lens of faith, hope and charity
  4. Despite differences in culture, US and India fall short in childbirth in similar ways
  5. How 'cannibalism' by breast cancer cells promotes dormancy: A possible clue into cancer recurrence
  6. Scientific theories aren't mere conjecture – to survive they must work
  7. Here's why your gut instinct is wrong at work – and how to know when it isn't
  8. Draining the swamp: A guide for outsiders and career politicians
  9. How to use digital devices this Lent for holy reflection
  10. How the US military is using 'violent, chaotic, beautiful' video games to train soldiers
  11. Low-income girls often feel unprepared for puberty
  12. What fax machines can teach us about electric cars
  13. Famines in the 21st century? It's not for lack of food
  14. Trump's immigration executive orders: The demise of due process and discretion
  15. No doubt about it: smokefree laws cut heart attacks in big way
  16. Rape on campus: Athletes, status, and the sexual assault crisis
  17. Trump's revised travel ban still faces legal challenges
  18. Why artificial turf may truly be bad for kids
  19. How traditional medicine can play a key role in Latino health care
  20. New York 2140: A novelist's vision of a drowned city that still never sleeps
  21. How our morals might politically polarize just about anything
  22. Americans and Mexicans living at the border are more connected than divided
  23. Lessons in resistance from MLK, the 'conservative militant'
  24. Why Wall Street is like a used car lot
  25. America's broadband market needs more competition
  26. Communicating climate change: Focus on the framing, not just the facts
  27. Can the government save money by privatizing prisons, Medicare and other functions?
  28. What would Mark Twain think of Donald Trump?
  29. Tooth be told: Millions of years of evolutionary history mark those molars
  30. March Mammal Madness tournament shows the power of 'performance science'
  31. Why China may want to repair its fraught relations with the Vatican
  32. Are Puerto Ricans really American citizens?
  33. How Republicans and Democrats can both keep their promises on health care
  34. 'Alternative facts': A psychiatrist’s guide to twisted relationships to truth
  35. Our experiments taught us why people troll
  36. The truth about Obama's economic legacy and Trump's inheritance
  37. Why do some countries disapprove of homosexuality? Money, democracy and religion
  38. How to talk climate change across the aisle: Focus on adaptive solutions rather than causes
  39. Does empathy have limits? Depends on whom you ask
  40. Can Ben Carson use the power of HUD to make America happier?
  41. Trump's address to Congress: Expert reaction
  42. Edible marijuana: What we need to know
  43. Dealing with hate: Can America's truth and reconciliation commissions help?
  44. Japan's gender-bending history
  45. Reprintable paper becomes a reality
  46. Donald Trump and Andrew Jackson: More in common than just populism
  47. Culling sharks won't protect surfers
  48. How the NEA's measly millions keep America's museums alive
  49. America has not always been as welcoming to refugees as we think
  50. Do you know what the Affordable Care Act does? Here's a primer to help