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Mississippi governor's race taking place under Jim Crow-era rules after judge refuses to block them

  • Written by Gideon Cohn-Postar, Graduate Student in History, Northwestern University
A lawsuit alleges that the way Mississippi will elect its governor on Tuesday is racist.AP/Rogelio V. Solis

A federal judge ruled on Nov. 1 that he would not stop Mississippi voters from electing a governor on Tuesday under an old, Jim Crow-era election law that a civil rights lawsuit argues perpetuates “white supremacy” and violates...

Read more: Mississippi governor's race taking place under Jim Crow-era rules after judge refuses to block them

'Joker' fans flocking to a Bronx stairway highlights tension of media tourism

  • Written by Laura M. Holzman, Associate Professor, Public Scholar of Curatorial Practices and Visual Art, IUPUI

New York’s newest tourist attraction isn’t a museum, park or art installation.

It’s a stairway.

Sandwiched between apartment buildings in the Bronx, it’s been dubbed by moviegoers the “Joker Stairs,” earning its name and fame after being featured prominently in “Joker.” Since the film’s release,...

Read more: 'Joker' fans flocking to a Bronx stairway highlights tension of media tourism

DeVos' formula for success: Trash public schools and push privatization

  • Written by Bryan Alexander, Senior Scholar, Learning, Design and Technology, Georgetown University
U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos wipes her brow during an October 2017 appearance in Bellevue, Washington.AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

When U.S Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos discussed the results from the 2019 National Assessment of Educational Progress, she described them as “devastating” and part of a worsening crisis in education.

T...

Read more: DeVos' formula for success: Trash public schools and push privatization

Yes, the research confirms: Managers shouldn't sleep with subordinates

  • Written by Vanessa K. Bohns, Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior, Cornell University
Workplace relationships can be trouble. Estrada Anton/Shutterstock.com

U.S. Rep. Katie Hill recently stepped down after information about an affair with a campaign staffer, and allegations of one with a congressional staffer, came to light.

The second affair would violate the House of Representatives’ recent ban on sexual relationships between...

Read more: Yes, the research confirms: Managers shouldn't sleep with subordinates

California wildfires signal the arrival of a planetary fire age

  • Written by Stephen Pyne, Emeritus Professor, School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University
Wind whips embers from a tree burned by a wildfire in Riverside, Calif. Oct. 31, 2019. AP Photo/Ringo H.W. Chiu

Another autumn, more fires, more refugees and incinerated homes. For California, flames have become the colors of fall.

Free-burning fire is the proximate provocation for the havoc, since its ember storms are engulfing landscapes. But in...

Read more: California wildfires signal the arrival of a planetary fire age

McDonald's fired its CEO for sleeping with an employee – research shows why even consensual office romances can be a problem

  • Written by Vanessa K. Bohns, Associate Professor of Organizational Behavior, Cornell University
More workplaces are banning employee relationships.AP Photo/Jeff Roberson

McDonald’s ousted its CEO over a consensual relationship with an employee, just a week after U.S. Rep. Katie Hill stepped down due to a similar allegation.

Both McDonald’s and the House of Representatives ban sexual relationships between supervisors and employees.

Wh...

Read more: McDonald's fired its CEO for sleeping with an employee – research shows why even consensual office...

Why doesn't the US just send Anne Sacoolas back to the UK? Here's what's at stake in this dispute over diplomatic immunity

  • Written by David Banks, Professorial Lecturer of International Politics, American University School of International Service
The parents of Harry Dunn spoke at a press conference in New York on October 14.AP Photo/Craig Ruttle

The U.S. and U.K. are engaged in an international dispute about the right to diplomatic immunity.

On August 27, 2019, Anne Sacoolas, wife of a U.S. diplomat resident in the U.K., allegedly struck and killed a British motorcyclist, Harry Dunn, when...

Read more: Why doesn't the US just send Anne Sacoolas back to the UK? Here's what's at stake in this dispute...

Don't make intimate violence victims look for help -- research shows they fare better when police and community organizations coordinate assistance

  • Written by Anne DePrince, Professor of Psychology, University of Denver
Intimate violence victims fare better with coordinated help.Shutterstock, photo illustration by Dragana Gordic

Michelle Monson’s story, reported by Rachel Louise Snyder in “No Visible Bruises,” is a haunting tale of intimate violence and missed opportunities.

Michelle tried to escape her husband’s abuse. She tried to get...

Read more: Don't make intimate violence victims look for help -- research shows they fare better when police...

What really causes home field advantage – and why it's on the decline

  • Written by Konstantinos Pelechrinis, Associate Professor of Computing and Information, University of Pittsburgh
The Washington Nationals celebrate their World Series win in front of fans of the Houston Astros.AP Photo/Matt Slocum

Never before has the away team won every single game in the World Series, but that’s exactly what happened this year.

When the Washington Nationals won Game 7 in Houston to clinch the series against the Houston Astros, it...

Read more: What really causes home field advantage – and why it's on the decline

Cada vez más universidades en EEUU rechazan los examenes estandarizados para admitir alumnos

  • Written by Joseph Soares, Professor of Sociology, Wake Forest University
¿Por qué debemos requerir un examen que está sesgado contra los jóvenes de bajo ingreso, las mujeres y los afrodesciendientes?Shutterstock.com

Erase una vez, en 1980, que Bates College y Bowdoin College eran prácticamente los únicos colegios de artes liberales en Estados Unidos que no requerían a los...

Read more: Cada vez más universidades en EEUU rechazan los examenes estandarizados para admitir alumnos

More Articles ...

  1. Website privacy options aren't much of a choice since they're hard to find and use
  2. Curious Kids: Why does pizza taste so good?
  3. Will the NCAA's move to let college athletes get paid endorsements make a difference? 3 questions answered
  4. Monsanto wins $7.7b lawsuit in Brazil – but farmers' fight to stop its ‘amoral’ royalty system will continue
  5. How much of a difference does the number of kids in a classroom make?
  6. Impeachment resolution: 3 reasons the House voted even though the Constitution doesn't require it
  7. Could Congress reverse Trump's decision to pull troops out of Syria?
  8. Why the Fed has no choice but to keep cutting interest rates – if it wants to avoid a financial crisis
  9. What a boycott that never happened can reveal about blame, consumer psychology and the free-market system
  10. Super-soldier T-cells fight cancer better after a transformational DNA delivery
  11. Meditation apps might calm you -- but miss the point of Buddhist mindfulness
  12. Will killing Al-Baghdadi give Trump a boost in the polls? Probably, but it won't last
  13. Democrat or Republican, Americans are angry, frustrated and overwhelmed
  14. At these championship-winning schools, coaches sacrifice time and money for players to beat the odds
  15. 'The Current War: Director's Cut' shows how the electric power system we take for granted came to be
  16. Is it ethical for Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg to accept a $1 million prize? Yes, but it's hard to explain
  17. What western states can learn from Native American wildfire management strategies
  18. Rabies' horrifying symptoms inspired folktales of humans turned into werewolves, vampires and other monsters
  19. Is the US losing the artificial intelligence arms race?
  20. The EPA disbanded our clean air science panel. We met anyway – and found that particle pollution regulations aren't protecting public health
  21. Before Martin Luther, there was Erasmus – a Dutch theologian who paved the way for the Protestant Reformation
  22. Lebanon uprising unites people across faiths, defying deep sectarian divides
  23. Half a billion on Halloween pet costumes is latest sign of America's out-of-control consumerism
  24. Zombie flu: How the 1919 influenza pandemic fueled the rise of the living dead
  25. Why we love big, blood-curdling screams
  26. The scariest part of Halloween may be costume contact lenses, an eye doctor says
  27. A good night’s sleep, a long-sought dream for sleep apnea patients, may be in closer reach
  28. Why 'acting locally' is impossible in an interconnected world
  29. What Trump's travel ban really looks like, almost two years in
  30. Raising the minimum wage in restaurants could be a win for everyone
  31. Making employees feel welcome and valued can pay off – especially for nonprofits
  32. Better batteries are fueling a surge of electric scooters in India and China
  33. Day of the Dead: From Aztec goddess worship to modern Mexican celebration
  34. Argentina elects new president on promises to fix economy and unify a struggling nation
  35. David Lynch's chillingly prescient vision of modern America
  36. 3 global conditions – and a map – for saving nature and using it wisely
  37. Not all genes are necessary for survival – these species dropped extra genetic baggage
  38. WeWork debacle exposes why investing in a charismatic founder can be dangerous
  39. With anti-Semitism on the rise again, there are steps everyone can take to counter it
  40. What is 'dark money'? 5 questions answered
  41. Not all candy is candy – at least for tax purposes
  42. We mapped how food gets from farms to your home
  43. 5 milestones that created the internet, 50 years after the first network message
  44. Trump has upended the long history of US investment in Ukraine's democracy
  45. How steak became manly and salads became feminine
  46. The future of the US workforce will rely on AI, but don't count human workers out just yet
  47. As the climate changes, architects and engineers need to design buildings differently
  48. When Halloween became America's most dangerous holiday
  49. Leaf peep for science – I want your old photos of fall foliage
  50. How forceps permanently changed the way humans are born