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Are federal workers being forced into involuntary servitude?

  • Written by Michael H. LeRoy, Professor of Labor and Employment Relations, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
A TSA employee visits a food pantry.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

Many federal employees are being ordered by the federal government to work without pay until a spending bill is enacted.

Some workers object, arguing that they are being pressured to show up for work with no clear prospect of a payday. Some individuals have sued claiming that this...

Read more: Are federal workers being forced into involuntary servitude?

There's a wider scandal suggested by the Trump investigations

  • Written by Ofer Raban, Professor of Constitutional Law, University of Oregon
The New York district attorney dropped a financial fraud investigation of Ivanka Trump, left, and her brother, Donald Jr., right.AP/Seth Wenig

The scope of financial crimes unearthed so far by state and federal authorities investigating President Trump and his associates is remarkable.

Paul Manafort was found guilty of bank and tax fraud, and faces...

Read more: There's a wider scandal suggested by the Trump investigations

You can't control what you can't find: Detecting invasive species while they're still scarce

  • Written by Jake Walsh, Postdoctoral Research Associate, University of Wisconsin-Madison
There are 130 billion gallons of water in Wisconsin's Lake Mendota, and now, trillions of spiny water fleas.Corey Coyle/Wikimedia, CC BY

Most of the 10,000 ships lost to the bottom of the Great Lakes in wrecks over the past 400 years are still lost – hidden somewhere in 6 quadrillion gallons of water. Finding anything in a lake is a lesson in...

Read more: You can't control what you can't find: Detecting invasive species while they're still scarce

Not so long ago, cities were starved for trees

  • Written by Sonja Dümpelmann, Associate Professor of Landscape Architecture, Harvard University
In 1919, 1,376 new Norway Maples were planted along streets in Brooklyn.Department of Parks of the Borough of Brooklyn, City of New York

Many cities, in recent years, have initiated tree planting campaigns to offset carbon dioxide emissions and improve urban microclimates.

In 2007, New York City launched MillionTrees NYC, a program designed to plant...

Read more: Not so long ago, cities were starved for trees

Gene drive technology makes mouse offspring inherit specific traits from parents

  • Written by Kim Cooper, Assistant Professor of Biological Sciences, University of California San Diego
Genetically engineered mice are invaluable for learning about human disease.

As mouse geneticists, we spend a lot of time waiting for mice to make more mice. Their small size, ease of care and willingness to mate have made mice the “mammal of choice” for scientists for more than a century. Indeed, these wriggly fur balls that strike...

Read more: Gene drive technology makes mouse offspring inherit specific traits from parents

Digital technology offers new ways to teach lessons from the Holocaust

  • Written by Jennifer Rich, Assistant Professor; Director of Research and Education for the Rowan Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Rowan University
A student speaks with Holocaust survivor William Morgan using an interactive virtual conversation exhibit at the the Holocaust Museum Houston in January 2019.David J. Phillip/AP

When it comes to understanding the horrors of the Holocaust – one of the key aims of International Holocaust Remembrance Day – most millennials are woefully...

Read more: Digital technology offers new ways to teach lessons from the Holocaust

What Trump and Pelosi can learn from a different kind of shutdown that crippled the nation

  • Written by Thomas Kochan, Professor of Management, Co-Director of the MIT Sloan Institute for Work and Employment Research, MIT Sloan School of Management

Two sides of a dispute are at an impasse.

Both refuse to negotiate until the other side gives in to their central demand, with no reason to compromise. Animosity between the parties deepens as they hurl personal insults. The stalemate seems intractable as public costs mount.

While this may sound like it’s describing the government shutdown,...

Read more: What Trump and Pelosi can learn from a different kind of shutdown that crippled the nation

Venezuela power struggle plunges nation into turmoil: 3 essential reads

  • Written by Catesby Holmes, Global Affairs Editor, The Conversation US
Can one country really have two presidents?AP Photo/Boris Vergara

Just days after Venezuela’s authoritarian President Nicolás Maduro survived a Jan. 21 military coup attempt, the leader of Venezuela’s opposition-dominated legislature declared himself the country’s interim president.

“I swear to formally assume the...

Read more: Venezuela power struggle plunges nation into turmoil: 3 essential reads

Data privacy rules in the EU may leave the US behind

  • Written by Thomas Holt, Professor of Criminal Justice, Michigan State University
Should privacy mean different things depending which side of the Atlantic you live on?pixinoo/Shutterstock.com

France made headlines on Jan. 21 for fining Google US$57 million – the first fine to be issued for violations of the European Union’s newly implemented General Data Protection Regulations. GDPR, as it’s called, is meant...

Read more: Data privacy rules in the EU may leave the US behind

Why it's wrong to label students 'at-risk'

  • Written by Ivory A. Toldson, Professor of Counseling Psychology, Howard University
The term "at-risk" is frequently used to describe students from challenging circumstances. Some educators are working to change that.Diego Cervo/www.shutterstock.com

Of all the terms used to describe students who don’t perform well in traditional educational settings, few are used as frequently– or as casually – as the term...

Read more: Why it's wrong to label students 'at-risk'

More Articles ...

  1. How to show gratitude to TSA workers
  2. Personal diplomacy has long been a presidential tactic, but Trump adds a twist
  3. Inside the Kingdom of Hayti, 'the Wakanda of the Western Hemisphere'
  4. Have you caught a catfish? Online dating can be deceptive
  5. Women are better than men at the free throw line
  6. We can't save everything from climate change – here's how to make choices
  7. The Trump administration wants to tighten SNAP work requirements, bypassing Congress
  8. Why paper maps still matter in the digital age
  9. Are microbes causing your milk allergy?
  10. Shutdown's economic impact is a forceful reminder of why government matters
  11. Lessons from 'Spider-Man': How video games could change college science education
  12. Nazis and communists tried it too: Foreign interference in US elections dates back decades
  13. It's cold! A physiologist explains how to keep your body feeling warm
  14. Howard Thurman – the Baptist minister who had a deep influence on MLK
  15. A teen scientist helped me discover tons of golf balls polluting the ocean
  16. America's public schools seldom bring rich and poor together – and MLK would disapprove
  17. Martin Luther King Jr., union man
  18. What a 16th-century mystic can teach us about making good decisions
  19. Bison are back, and that benefits many other species on the Great Plains
  20. How Central American migrants helped revive the US labor movement
  21. Food is medicine: How US policy is shifting toward nutrition for better health
  22. What’s an index fund?
  23. Can genetic engineering save disappearing forests?
  24. Data breaches are inevitable – here's how to protect yourself anyway
  25. Is winter miserable for wildlife?
  26. 3 ways Trump could disrupt health care for the better
  27. Razor burned: Why Gillette's campaign against toxic masculinity missed the mark
  28. El juicio al Chapo evidencia por qué un muro no detendrá el tráfico de drogas entre México y Estados Unidos
  29. A new way to curb nitrogen pollution: Regulate fertilizer producers, not just farmers
  30. Trump's interpreters for Putin meetings face ethical dilemma
  31. In 'airports of the future,' everything new is old again
  32. The biggest nonprofit media outlets are thriving but smaller ones may not survive
  33. Want better tips? Go for gold
  34. El Chapo trial shows why a wall won't stop drugs from crossing the US-Mexico border
  35. Brexit: An ‘escape room’ with no escape
  36. Garbage collection in Syria is crucial to fighting the Islamic State
  37. States are on the front lines of fighting inequality
  38. New debit card for federal student loan borrowers could save money, but concerns linger
  39. Why victims of Catholic priests need to hear more than confessions
  40. Ulterior motives may lurk behind new debit card for federal student loan borrowers
  41. Trump's reference to Wounded Knee evokes the dark history of suppression of indigenous religions
  42. Leaders always 'manufacture' crises, in politics and business
  43. Toward a circular economy: Tackling the plastics recycling problem
  44. Many painful returns: Coping with crummy gifts
  45. Offices are too hot or too cold – is there a better way to control room temperature?
  46. Guatemala in crisis after president bans corruption investigation into his government
  47. The shutdown will harm the health and safety of Americans, even after it's long over
  48. How to train the body's own cells to combat antibiotic resistance
  49. Why do Muslim women wear a hijab?
  50. To preserve US national parks in a warming world, reconnect fragmented public lands