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Immigration, legislation, investigation and child poverty: 4 scholars respond to Trump's State of the Union

  • Written by Matthew Wright, Assistant professor of government, American University School of Public Affairs

Editor’s note: In his second State of the Union address, President Donald Trump ranged from generous to combative, eloquent to blunt. He unexpectedly complimented the wave of recently elected Democratic women in the House, and they responded by applauding for themselves. And he spent a lot of time on a his favorite topic: immigration and the...

Read more: Immigration, legislation, investigation and child poverty: 4 scholars respond to Trump's State of...

Should we judge people for their past moral failings?

  • Written by Andrew Khoury, Instructor of Philosophy, Arizona State University
Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam, accompanied by his wife, speaks during a news conference.AP Photo/Steve Helber

Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam is facing a controversy after a photograph surfaced from his medical school yearbook showing one person in blackface and another wearing a Ku Klux Klan hood. The media alleged the governor was the one in...

Read more: Should we judge people for their past moral failings?

People don't trust blockchain systems – is regulation a way to help?

  • Written by Kevin Werbach, Associate Professor of Legal Studies and Business Ethics at the Wharton School, University of Pennsylvania
Using blockchain technology can feel like falling and hoping someone will catch you.Nicoleta Raftu/Shutterstock.com

Blockchain technology isn’t as widely used as it could be, largely because blockchain users don’t trust each other, as research shows. Business leaders and regular people are also slow to adopt blockchain-based systems...

Read more: People don't trust blockchain systems – is regulation a way to help?

Yellow vest protests erupt in Iraq, Bulgaria and beyond – but don't expect a 'yellow wave'

  • Written by Dawn Brancati, Visiting Scholar, Saltzman Institute of War and Peace Studies, Columbia University
Protesters in Iraq have been wearing yellow vests since December.AP Photo/Nabil al-Jurani

Protesters wearing reflective safety vests have unsettled France for months, halting traffic, chanting slogans and at times clashing violently with police.

Promises by President Emmanuel Macron to raise worker pay and cut taxes have not quelled the French...

Read more: Yellow vest protests erupt in Iraq, Bulgaria and beyond – but don't expect a 'yellow wave'

Stem cell treatments for arthritic knees are unproven, expensive and potentially dangerous

  • Written by Mark Miller, Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of Virginia
An X-ray of both knees reveals a narrow space between joints caused by loss of cartilage. Puwadol Jaturawutthichai/Shutterstock.com

Twelve patients who tried injections of stem cells were hospitalized with infections, according to a report in The New York Times that should cause patients concern. More important is that they should investigate stem...

Read more: Stem cell treatments for arthritic knees are unproven, expensive and potentially dangerous

Dying while black: Perpetual gaps exist in health care for African-Americans

  • Written by Yolonda Wilson, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Howard University
An African American man in a hospital bed. Studies show that pain in African American patients is often not addressed. pixelheadphoto/digitalskillet

Several years ago, MapQuest directed me on a 10-hour drive to visit my father in a Florida hospital. Complications from diabetes, including blindness, kidney failure, congestive heart failure, and a...

Read more: Dying while black: Perpetual gaps exist in health care for African-Americans

Restorative practices may not be the solution, but neither are suspensions

  • Written by F. Chris Curran, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
School experiments with new ways to discipline students without suspending them show mixed results.Africa Studio / www.shutterstock.com

Proponents of restorative justice suffered a blow recently with the late 2018 release of a much anticipated RAND study of restorative practices in Pittsburgh schools. The study’s results showed restorative...

Read more: Restorative practices may not be the solution, but neither are suspensions

African-Americans' economic setbacks from the Great Recession are ongoing – and could be repeated

  • Written by Vincent Adejumo, Lecturer of African American Studies, University of Florida

The financial crisis of 2009, the worst since the Great Depression, was hard on all Americans. But arguably no group felt its sting more than African-Americans, who were already the most economically and financially vulnerable segment of the population going into it.

Even today, a decade since the Great Recession hit, blacks still haven’t...

Read more: African-Americans' economic setbacks from the Great Recession are ongoing – and could be repeated

Why do so many Americans now support legalizing marijuana?

  • Written by Amy Adamczyk, Professor of Sociology and Criminal Justice, City University of New York
A man holds up a joint during a 2017 rally to support the legalization of marijuana in Washington, D.C.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

American views on marijuana have shifted incredibly rapidly. Thirty years ago, marijuana legalization seemed like a lost cause. In 1988, only 24 percent of Americans supported legalization.

But steadily, the nation began to...

Read more: Why do so many Americans now support legalizing marijuana?

A nuclear treaty between Russia and the US is falling apart – can it be saved?

  • Written by Jeffrey Fields, Associate Professor of the Practice of International Relations, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Russian President Vladimir Putin, left, speaks to Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu.Alexei Nikolsky, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced Feb. 1 that the United States would withdraw from its nuclear weapons treaty with Russia.

Since the Obama administration, the U.S. has accused Russia of being in violation of...

Read more: A nuclear treaty between Russia and the US is falling apart – can it be saved?

More Articles ...

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  2. Look out for the 'Skutnik' during Trump's State of the Union
  3. Why Jamal Khashoggi's murder took place in a consulate
  4. Bible reading in public schools has been a divisive issue – and this old culture war is starting again
  5. Americans say they're worried about climate change – so why don't they vote that way?
  6. Is your VPN secure?
  7. People diagnosed with cancer often don’t embrace the term 'survivor'
  8. Is authoritarianism bad for the economy? Ask Venezuela – or Hungary or Turkey
  9. Potential treatment for eye cancer using tumor-killing virus
  10. How to avoid a Super Bowl injury to your voice
  11. Salt doesn't melt ice – here's how it actually makes winter streets safe
  12. Facebook's business is helping other businesses
  13. Steaming lakes and thundersnow: 4 questions answered about weird winter weather
  14. Belichick versus McVay: An age-old question of leadership
  15. What is frostbite? An ER doc explains
  16. Measles: Why it's so deadly, and why vaccination is so vital
  17. Super Bowl LIII and the soul of Atlanta
  18. 3 ways to improve education about slavery in the US
  19. Why Muslim women wear a hijab: 3 essential reads
  20. Who’s smoking now, and why it matters
  21. Odds of military coup in Venezuela rise every day Maduro stays in office
  22. Facebook is a persuasion platform that's changing the advertising rulebook
  23. The Fed changed its strategy on interest rates – here's what it means
  24. Protecting the world's wetlands: 5 essential reads
  25. Capturing carbon to fight climate change is dividing environmentalists
  26. Facebook at 15: It's not all bad, but now it must be good
  27. First private spacecraft shoots for the moon
  28. How Howard Thurman met Gandhi and brought nonviolence to the civil rights movement
  29. Text analysis of thousands of grant abstracts shows that writing style matters
  30. The new Congress likely won't impeach Trump and remove him from office – here's why
  31. Keeping the lights on during extreme cold snaps takes investments and upgrades
  32. Scientist at work: I'm a geologist who's dived dozens of times to explore submarine volcanoes
  33. Escuchar expresiones de odio predispone nuestro cerebro a cometer actos de odio
  34. Cannabidiol: Rising star or popular fad?
  35. CBD: Rising star or popular fad?
  36. Small streams and wetlands are key parts of river networks – here's why they need protection
  37. Congress's First Step Act reflects a new criminal justice consensus, but will it reduce mass incarceration?
  38. Europe's refugee crisis explains why border walls don't stop migration
  39. School suspensions don't stop violence – they help students celebrate it
  40. How Facebook went from friend to frenemy
  41. How Jackie Robinson’s wife, Rachel, helped him break baseball's color line
  42. Teaching hope during the 2020 campaign season
  43. What would happen if hospitals openly shared their prices?
  44. What 4 economists say about the state of the union
  45. Dam collapse at Brazilian mine exposes grave safety problems
  46. Why women still earn a lot less than men
  47. 3 ways that big data reveals what you really like to watch, read and listen to
  48. Mexico is bleeding. Can its new president stop the violence?
  49. Together, more heat and more carbon dioxide may not alter quantity or nutritional quality of crops
  50. How to have productive disagreements about politics and religion