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Tanzanian president bluntly attacks contraception, saying high birth rates are good for economy

  • Written by Kristen Carey, PhD Candidate in History, Boston University
Tanzania was one of the first sub-Saharan African nations to embrace family planning as a national development priority.US Air Force, CC BY-SA

Tanzanian President John Magufuli has suspended advertising by family planning organizations until further review, raising outcry among human rights groups and causing unrest within Tanzania’s health...

Read more: Tanzanian president bluntly attacks contraception, saying high birth rates are good for economy

Collaboration, not fighting, is what the rural West is really about

  • Written by Steven C. Beda, Instructor of History, University of Oregon
Harney County, Ore., sign.Wikimedia/Ken Lund, CC BY-SA

Dick Jenkins is a fourth-generation rancher living in Oregon’s most remote county. I wanted to know why he continues living in a rural community, even though life elsewhere might be easier.

“Taking care of [the land] is worth more than all the money in the world,” he told me....

Read more: Collaboration, not fighting, is what the rural West is really about

My thoughts are my password, because my brain reactions are unique

  • Written by Wenyao Xu, Assistant Professor of Computer Science and Engineering, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
A test subject entering a brain password.Wenyao Xu, et al., CC BY-ND

Your brain is an inexhaustible source of secure passwords – but you might not have to remember anything. Passwords and PINs with letters and numbers are relatively easily hacked, hard to remember and generally insecure. Biometrics are starting to take their place, with...

Read more: My thoughts are my password, because my brain reactions are unique

Republican women are just fine, thank you, with being Republican

  • Written by Christine A. Kray, Associate Professor of Anthropology, Rochester Institute of Technology
'Women for Trump' listening to President Donald Trump speak at a campaign rally in Wheeling, WV, in September.AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

Republican women have faced a conundrum repeatedly in the last two years.

In the cases of Donald Trump, Roy Moore and Brett Kavanaugh, the question facing them has been whether to support a male Republican leader...

Read more: Republican women are just fine, thank you, with being Republican

Hambre mundial aumenta por tercer año consecutivo debido al cambio climático

  • Written by Jessica Eise, Ross Fellow in the Brian Lamb School of Communication Doctoral Program, Purdue University
Un hombre camina por un invernadero al noreste de Uganda, donde se enseñan técnicas de agricultura sostenible, como cultivos resistentes a las sequías y plantación de árboles. Fotografía del 19 de octubre de 2017.AP Photo/Adelle Kalakouti

El hambre en el mundo ha aumentado por tercer año consecutivo,...

Read more: Hambre mundial aumenta por tercer año consecutivo debido al cambio climático

Democrats can't count on Latinos to swing the midterms

  • Written by Steffen W. Schmidt, Lucken Endowed Professor of Political Science, Iowa State University
Latinos make up 12 percent of all registered voters in the US, but less than half vote regularly.AP Photo/Isaac Brekken, File

Democrats are ready to turn out in record numbers for November’s midterm elections, surveys show, particularly women and older voters.

But not all members of the party are as motivated.

Democrats have “a Latino...

Read more: Democrats can't count on Latinos to swing the midterms

How American tax laws encourage inequality

  • Written by Anthony C. Infanti, Professor of Law, University of Pittsburgh
People of color, women and the LGBTQ community are just some of the groups who often get slighted with tax reforms.Andrey_Popov/shutterstock.com

Talk of tax reform always seems to be in the air.

Last fall, Republicans in Congress hastily pushed through the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, hailing it as “historic legislation” and “once-in-a-g...

Read more: How American tax laws encourage inequality

Migrant caravan members have right to claim asylum – here's why getting it will be hard

  • Written by Abigail Stepnitz, PhD Candidate, University of California, Berkeley

Roughly 5,000 people, mostly from Central America’s violent and unstable “Northern Triangle” of Guatemala, El Salvador and Honduras are reportedly making their way through Mexico with the intention of claiming asylum at the U.S. border. The so-called “migrant caravan” is attracting intense social and political...

Read more: Migrant caravan members have right to claim asylum – here's why getting it will be hard

Reclaiming video games' queer past before it disappears

  • Written by Adrienne Shaw, Associate Professor of Media and Communication, Temple University
The cover of the ‘GayBlade’ game, scanned by designer Ryan Best.LGBTQ Game Archive, Author provided

The role of video games in queer communities is finally being recognized – but it’s almost too late.

For 30 years, GLAAD, a leading advocate for LGBTQ visibility in the media, has honored TV shows that positively represent...

Read more: Reclaiming video games' queer past before it disappears

Energy transitions are nothing new but the one underway is unprecedented and urgent

  • Written by Brian C. Black, Distinguished Professor of History and Environmental Studies, Pennsylvania State University
A horse-drawn fire vehicle turns the corner at the intersection of West 43rd Street and Broadway in New York City about a century ago.Library of Congress

The combustion of oil, gas and coal have made possible a much higher standard of living for humans through radical innovations in technology and science over the past 150 years. Yet for decades,...

Read more: Energy transitions are nothing new but the one underway is unprecedented and urgent

More Articles ...

  1. What kind of support do breast cancer patients want? Food, rides and prayer
  2. Why cows are getting a bad rap in lab-grown meat debate
  3. Nonprofit drugmaker Civica Rx aims to cure a health care system ailment
  4. Georgia election fight shows that black voter suppression, a southern tradition, still flourishes
  5. Trump encuentra oportunidad electoral en la crisis humanitaria venezolana
  6. Why washing your hands well is so important to protect your family from the flu
  7. E-cigarettes and a new threat: How to dispose of them
  8. Transgender and non-binary people face health care discrimination every day in the US
  9. Georgia's gubernatorial race could be a bellwether for Democrats nationally
  10. These kids and young adults want their day in court on climate change
  11. Artificial intelligence will make you smarter
  12. The Village Voice's photographers captured change, turmoil unfolding on New York City's streets
  13. Why the Christian idea of hell no longer persuades people to care for the poor
  14. Why did the flu kill 80,000 Americans last year?
  15. Harvard case could represent the end of race in college admissions
  16. A day to celebrate chemistry’s favorite unit — the mole. But what’s a mole?
  17. Saudi Arabia is a repressive regime – and so are a lot of US allies
  18. ¿Eres ciudadano? El gobierno de Trump quiere saber
  19. Two Native American geneticists interpret Elizabeth Warren's DNA test
  20. Does climate change affect real estate prices? Only if you believe in it
  21. It's the economics: Red states embracing wind energy don't do it for the climate
  22. Many Midwesterners will likely never believe in climate change. Here’s how to encourage them to act anyway
  23. Is climate change causing a rise in the number of mosquito and tick-borne diseases?
  24. How have textbooks portrayed climate change?
  25. What is climate-ready infrastructure? Some cities are starting to adapt
  26. The risk of 'cascading' natural disasters is on the rise
  27. World hunger has risen for three straight years, and climate change is a cause
  28. How a game can move people from climate apathy to action
  29. Rising insurance costs may convince Americans that climate change risks are real
  30. 3 dangers of rising temperatures that could affect your health now
  31. In Alaska, everyone's grappling with climate change
  32. How winning $1 billion in Mega Millions could lead to bankruptcy
  33. How winning $1.6 billion in Mega Millions could still lead to bankruptcy
  34. How winning $1.54 billion in Mega Millions could still lead to bankruptcy
  35. The Mega Millions jackpot is now more than US$1 billion – where does all that lottery profit really go?
  36. The Mega Millions jackpot is now more than $1 billion – where does all that lottery profit really go?
  37. El partidismo está profundamente arraigado en EEUU, incluso entre los votantes 'independientes'
  38. Why radiation protection experts are concerned over EPA proposal
  39. Congress takes first steps toward regulating artificial intelligence
  40. Sewage surveillance is the next frontier in the fight against polio
  41. Jamal Khashoggi: Casualty of the Trump administration’s disregard for democracy and civil rights in the Middle East?
  42. Banksy and the tradition of destroying art
  43. New data tool can help scientists use limited funds to protect the greatest number of endangered species
  44. Taxes and caps on carbon work differently but calibrating them poses the same challenge
  45. Arms sales to Saudi Arabia give Trump all the leverage he needs in Khashoggi affair
  46. Generation Z voters could make waves in 2018 midterm elections
  47. Government-funded buyouts after disasters are slow and inequitable – here's how that could change
  48. Trump sees opportunity in Venezuela's humanitarian crisis as midterms approach
  49. Blockchains won't fix internet voting security – and could make it worse
  50. What Thomas Jefferson, Donald Trump and the American people think about freedom of the press