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American influence could take the hit as Putin, Zelenskiy try to make peace in Donbass

  • Written by Erik C. Nisbet, Associate Professor of Communication, Political Science and Environmental Policy and Co-Director of the Eurasian Security and Governance Program, The Ohio State University
Zelenskiy is facing a tough meeting with Russia's Putin on Dec. 9. Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP

President Vladimir Putin of Russia and his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, are set to meet Dec. 9 as part of efforts to end conflict in the separatist-controlled territories of Donbass.

Zelenskiy’s electoral victory in April...

Read more: American influence could take the hit as Putin, Zelenskiy try to make peace in Donbass

Large-scale education tests often come with side effects

  • Written by Yurou Wang, Clinical Assistant Professor, University of Alabama
Big education tests come with serious side effects, research shows.YanLev/Shutterstock.com

When results come out for big education tests like the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA), which primarily measures 15-year-old students’ knowledge and skills in reading, mathematics and science, the focus is often on which countries...

Read more: Large-scale education tests often come with side effects

American influence could take the hit as Putin, Zelenskiy try to make peace in Ukraine

  • Written by Erik C. Nisbet, Associate Professor of Communication, Political Science and Environmental Policy and Co-Director of the Eurasian Security and Governance Program, The Ohio State University
Zelenskiy is facing a tough meeting with Russia's Putin on Dec. 9. Ukrainian Presidential Press Office via AP

President Vladimir Putin of Russia and his Ukrainian counterpart, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, are set to meet Dec. 9 as part of efforts to end conflict in the separatist-controlled territories of Donbass.

Zelenskiy’s electoral victory in April...

Read more: American influence could take the hit as Putin, Zelenskiy try to make peace in Ukraine

From their balloons, the first aeronauts transformed our view of the world

  • Written by Jennifer Tucker, Associate Professor of History and Science in Society, Wesleyan University
A lithograph from Gaston Tissandier's balloon travels depicts falling stars.Archive.org

Near the beginning of the new film “The Aeronauts,” a giant gas-filled balloon called the “Mammoth” departs from London’s Vauxhall Gardens and ascends into the clouds, revealing a bird’s eye view of London.

To some moviegoers,...

Read more: From their balloons, the first aeronauts transformed our view of the world

NPR is still expanding the range of what authority sounds like after 50 years

  • Written by Jason Loviglio, Chair and Associate Professor of Media and Communication Studies, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
Susan Stamberg interviewed President Jimmy Carter during a National Public Radio call-in program in 1979.AP Photo/Charles Tasnadi

From its start half a century ago, National Public Radio heralded a new approach to the sound of radio in the United States.

NPR “would speak with many voices and many dialects,” according to “Purposes,&...

Read more: NPR is still expanding the range of what authority sounds like after 50 years

Limited eating times could be a new way to fight obesity and diabetes

  • Written by Satchin Panda, Professor of Regulatory Biology at the Salk Institute for Biological Studies, Adjunct Professor of Cell and Developmental Biology at UCSD, University of California San Diego
Time limits on eating may help to keep diabetics' blood glucose in check. ratmaner/Shutterstock.com

People with obesity, high blood sugar, high blood pressure or high cholesterol are often advised to eat less and move more, but our new research suggests there is now another simple tool to fight off these diseases: restricting your eating time to a...

Read more: Limited eating times could be a new way to fight obesity and diabetes

Turning gray and into the red: The true cost of growing old in America

  • Written by Jan Mutchler, Professor, Department of Gerontology, McCormack Graduate School Director, Center for Social and Demographic Research on Aging, Gerontology Institute, University of Massachusetts Boston
Are you economically ready for old age?Shutterstock

The U.S. population is aging at such a rate that within a few years, older Americans will outnumber the country’s children for the first time, according to census projections. But rising rents, health care and other living costs mean that for many entering their retirement years, balancing...

Read more: Turning gray and into the red: The true cost of growing old in America

5 ways to check a college's financial health

  • Written by Leo M. Lambert, President Emeritus and Professor of Education, Elon University
Signs that a college may be about to close may not always be apparent.Konstantin L/Shutterstock.com

The financial health of colleges and universities is much in the news these days. An enrollment cliff – a drop-off in traditionally aged college students – will hit in the next decade and may threaten more small, regional and marginally...

Read more: 5 ways to check a college's financial health

'Stop-and-frisk' can work, under careful supervision

  • Written by Henry F. Fradella, Professor and Associate Director, School of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Arizona State University
A 2012 training session between two New York police officers demonstrated a way stop-and-frisk encounters could be handled.AP Photo/Colleen Long

In mid-November, former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg apologized publicly for his backing of a practice intended to reduce violent crime that had for years been criticized as racially biased....

Read more: 'Stop-and-frisk' can work, under careful supervision

An ethicist explains why philanthropy is no license to do bad stuff

  • Written by Patricia Illingworth, Senior Fellow, Carr Center for Human Rights Policy, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University; Professor of Ethics, Northeastern University
Jeffrey Epstein faced sex trafficking and conspiracy charges when he died in July 2019.AP Photo/Richard Drew

I teach a course on ethics and philanthropy and have written about how to donate to charities ethically.

Recent news about people who make big charitable gifts acting badly is making me wonder whether philanthropy really does make the world...

Read more: An ethicist explains why philanthropy is no license to do bad stuff

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