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Can a genetic test predict if you will develop Type 2 diabetes?

  • Written by Mylynda Massart, Assistant Professor of Family Medicine, University of Pittsburgh
A woman uses a lancet on her finger to check her blood sugar level with a glucose meter.Behopeful/Shutterstock.com

When I got home after work I was surprised to find my husband and three children sitting by the television and watching the news. They had just learned that the direct to consumer genetic testing company 23andMe was now offering a...

Read more: Can a genetic test predict if you will develop Type 2 diabetes?

There's no way to stop human trafficking by treating it as an immigration enforcement problem

  • Written by Bob Spires, Assistant Professor of Education, University of Richmond
Trump has signed a law aimed at curbing sex trafficking.AP Photo/Evan Vucci

Robert Kraft, the New England Patriots’ billionaire owner, recently made headlines when he was charged with two counts of soliciting prostitution. The women involved were undocumented Chinese immigrants who were human trafficking victims at the Orchids of Asia spa in J...

Read more: There's no way to stop human trafficking by treating it as an immigration enforcement problem

Diets can do more than help you lose weight – they could also save the planet

  • Written by Adrienne Rose Bitar, Postdoctoral Associate, Cornell University
Some diets have ambitions a lot weightier than helping you lose a few pounds.AP Photo/Shuji Kajiyama

Fad diets have long been brushed off as selfish, superficial quests to lose weight.

But if you study the actual content of popular diet books, you will discover that most tell a different story. Many inspire dieters to improve the health of their...

Read more: Diets can do more than help you lose weight – they could also save the planet

Skilled blue-collar jobs are growing – though women aren't getting them

  • Written by Eric Hoyt, Research Director of the Center for Employment Equity, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Skilled craft jobs like plumbing and carpentry pay better than most blue-collar jobs.VGstockstudio/shutterstock.com

In the press, the phrase “blue collar” is often used as shorthand for white working-class men.

The visibility of this specific slice of the workforce has risen significantly since the 2016 election, when white...

Read more: Skilled blue-collar jobs are growing – though women aren't getting them

Sen. Martha McSally, pioneering Air Force pilot, shows how stereotypes victimize sexual assault survivors again

  • Written by Leigh Goodmark, Professor of Law, University of Maryland, Baltimore

Martha McSally was the first woman to fly combat missions for the United States Air Force after the prohibition on female combat pilots was lifted in 1991. She later sued the United States Department of Defense, challenging a policy that required servicewomen in Saudi Arabia to wear abaya (full-body coverings) when traveling off-base. In 2014,...

Read more: Sen. Martha McSally, pioneering Air Force pilot, shows how stereotypes victimize sexual assault...

Old stone walls record the changing location of magnetic north

  • Written by John Delano, Distinguished Teaching Professor of Atmospheric and Environmental Sciences, University at Albany, State University of New York
The orientations of the stone walls that crisscross the Northeastern U.S. can tell a geomagnetic tale as well as a historical one.John Delano, CC BY-ND

When I was a kid living in southern New Hampshire, my family home was on the site of an abandoned farmstead consisting of massive stone foundations of quarried granite where dwellings once stood....

Read more: Old stone walls record the changing location of magnetic north

After 100 years, Mussolini's fascist party is a reminder of the fragility of freedom

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Italian dictator Benito Mussolini and Nazi leader Adolf Hitler before attending a conference in Munich, Germany.AP Photo/File

One hundred years ago, in March 1919, Benito Mussolini created the fascist party in Italy.

For more than two decades, when he came to be known as “Il Duce,” or “the leader,” Mussolini wielded broad...

Read more: After 100 years, Mussolini's fascist party is a reminder of the fragility of freedom

Stemming the tide of trash: 5 essential reads on recycling

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Environment + Energy Editor, The Conversation
Where does it go from here?spwidoff/Shutterstock.com

A year after China upended global materials markets by banning imports of much solid waste, the effects are still rippling around the globe. Many U.S. recyclers are awash in materials they formerly sent to China for processing. Some cities with few options are burning recyclables in incinerators....

Read more: Stemming the tide of trash: 5 essential reads on recycling

Can we tweak marine chemistry to help stave off climate change?

  • Written by Wil Burns, Professor of Research & Co-Director, Institute for Carbon Removal Law & Policy, American University School of International Service
Trapping carbon dioxide in minerals happens naturally over thousands of years. Can humans speed it up – safely?Simon Clancy, CC BY-SA

The world’s nations are nowhere near to meeting the global Paris Agreement’s goals on climate change of holding global temperature increases to 2 degrees Celsius compared to 19th-century averages,...

Read more: Can we tweak marine chemistry to help stave off climate change?

Beyond blackface: How college yearbooks captured protest and change

  • Written by John R. Thelin, University Research Professor, University of Kentucky
College yearbook editors in the 1960s juxtaposed pictures of traditional campus activities, such as Greek Life, alongside images of protests and marches.The Kentuckian, 1968

Ever since a photograph surfaced of someone in blackface – and another dressed in a Ku Klux Klan robe – on the medical college yearbook page of Virginia Gov. Ralph...

Read more: Beyond blackface: How college yearbooks captured protest and change

More Articles ...

  1. US military steps up cyberwarfare effort
  2. What lessons can the clergy sex abuse crisis draw from a 4th-century church schism?
  3. Humans and machines can improve accuracy when they work together
  4. Pregnant women shouldn't have to choose between a job and a healthy baby
  5. Ancient DNA is a powerful tool for studying the past – when archaeologists and geneticists work together
  6. Underwater mudslides are the biggest threat to offshore drilling, and energy companies aren't ready for them
  7. Millennials are US$1 trillion in debt – but they're better at saving than previous generations
  8. Why Spain needs more feminism in the classroom
  9. The US government might charge for satellite data again – here's why that would be a big mistake
  10. Mass-market electric pickup trucks and SUVs are on the way
  11. Could a booster shot of truth help scientists fight the anti-vaccine crisis?
  12. Charter school cap efforts gain momentum
  13. How women wage war – a short history of IS brides, Nazi guards and FARC insurgents
  14. Refugees forced to return to Syria face imprisonment, death at the hands of Assad
  15. Sex trafficking in the US: 4 questions answered
  16. Thoreau's great insight for the Anthropocene: Wildness is an attitude, not a place
  17. 3 ways activist kids these days resemble their predecessors
  18. Veterans are concerned about climate change, and that matters
  19. University of California's break with the biggest academic publisher could shake up scholarly publishing for good
  20. 11 things you can do to adjust to losing that 1 hour of sleep this weekend
  21. New AI art has artists, collaborators wondering: Who gets the credit?
  22. #StopThisShame, #GirlsAtDhaba, #WhyLoiter and more: women's fight against sexual harassment didn't start with #MeToo
  23. Once captives of Boko Haram, these students are finding new meaning in their lives in Pennsylvania
  24. How to prevent the 'robot apocalypse' from ending labor as we know it
  25. Artificial intelligence must know when to ask for human help
  26. Long before #MeToo, women in many parts of the world organized successful campaigns against sexual violence
  27. Brazil and Venezuela clash over migrants, humanitarian aid and closed borders
  28. A prison program in Connecticut seeks to find out what happens when prisoners are treated as victims
  29. A cure for HIV? Feasible but not yet realized
  30. Hoda Muthana wants to come home from Syria – just like many loyalist women who fled to Canada during the American Revolution
  31. US takes tentative steps toward opening up government data
  32. Are viruses the best weapon for fighting superbugs?
  33. Sexism has long been part of the culture of Southern Baptists
  34. How to distinguish a psychopath from a 'shy-chopath'
  35. The shutdown brought people who rely on SNAP an extra helping of economic hardship
  36. Ensuring racial equality – from classrooms to workplaces – depends on federal regulations Trump could roll back
  37. Opioid crisis shows partnering with industry can be bad for public health
  38. #MeToo whistleblowing is upending A century-old legal precedent in US demanding loyalty to the boss
  39. 4 things to know about Ash Wednesday
  40. #MeToo whistleblowing is upending century-old legal precedent demanding loyalty to the boss
  41. The struggle for coal miners’ health care and pension benefits continues
  42. Mining the Moon
  43. Autonomous drones can help search and rescue after disasters
  44. America's schools are crumbling – what will it take to fix them?
  45. What will come after a US withdrawal from Afghanistan?
  46. Kashmir conflict is not just a border dispute between India and Pakistan
  47. El origen de los cócteles artesanales es la Ley seca
  48. A letter from Beth Daley
  49. Purdue Pharma taps a Gilded Age history of pharmaceutical fraud
  50. Abortions rise worldwide when US cuts funding to women's health clinics, study finds