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Trump risks falling in to the ‘asymmetric resolve’ trap in Iran − just as presidents before him did elsewhere

  • Written by Charles Walldorf, Professor of Politics and International Affairs, Wake Forest University

Little has seemingly gone as Washington planned in the war against Iran.

The Iranian people have not risen up, one hard-line leader has been replaced by another, Iranian missiles and drones keep hitting targets across the Middle East, Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz, driving oil and gas prices up worldwide, and in sharp contrast to Trump’s...

Read more: Trump risks falling in to the ‘asymmetric resolve’ trap in Iran − just as presidents before him...

Why Iran targeted Amazon data centers and what that does – and doesn’t – change about warfare

  • Written by Dennis Murphy, Ph.D. Student of International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageSmoke rises in Abu Dhabi on March 1, 2026, after Iranian drone strikes around the city, including on data centers.Ryan Lim/AFP via Getty Images

Before dawn on March 1, 2026, Iranian Shahed drones struck two Amazon Web Services data centers in the United Arab Emirates. A third commercial data center in Bahrain was hit, though it is less clear...

Read more: Why Iran targeted Amazon data centers and what that does – and doesn’t – change about warfare

The Department of Justice is suing states for sensitive voter data − an election law scholar explains why federal efforts are facing resistance

  • Written by John J. Martin, Assistant Professor of Law, Quinnipiac University
imageThe Trump administration wants a lot of voter information from states.smartboy10/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

In May 2025, the U.S. Department of Justice began sending letters to state governments demanding copies of statewide voter registration lists. The request was unprecedented: It demanded not only publicly available voter data, such...

Read more: The Department of Justice is suing states for sensitive voter data − an election law scholar...

Why Michael Jackson’s daughter, Paris, won’t stop ‘til she gets enough from his estate

  • Written by Reid Kress Weisbord, Distinguished Professor of Law and Judge Norma Shapiro Scholar, Rutgers University - Newark
imageParis Jackson, seen here in March 2026, has sued the executors of Michael Jackson's estate several times.Stephane Cardinale /Corbis via Getty Images

When Michael Jackson died in 2009,his fairly straightforward 5-page will left everything he owned to a family trust – an estate planning technique for giving away property that allows for...

Read more: Why Michael Jackson’s daughter, Paris, won’t stop ‘til she gets enough from his estate

You’re not going to be alone in national parks this summer – enjoy the company

  • Written by Will Rice, Associate Professor of Outdoor Recreation and Wildland Management, University of Montana
imageAre there too many people here? It depends on your perspective.Michael Quinn/National Park Service

On a summer morning a couple of years ago, we went for a hike on the fabled Bright Angel Trail, one of the most popular trails in Grand Canyon National Park.

As scholars of tourism and outdoor recreation, our conversation inevitably turned to the...

Read more: You’re not going to be alone in national parks this summer – enjoy the company

Winter’s alarmingly low snowpack offers a glimpse of the changing rhythm of water in the western US

  • Written by Imtiaz Rangwala, Senior Research Scientist in Climate, Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
imageIn a good year, the West's mountain snowpack feeds streams and rivers well into summer.George Rose/Contributor/Getty Images News

Winter is more than just a season in the western U.S. – it is a savings account to get farms and homes through the long, dry summer ahead. As the snowpack that accumulates in the mountains through winter slowly...

Read more: Winter’s alarmingly low snowpack offers a glimpse of the changing rhythm of water in the western US

Federal election observers once played a key role in securing voting rights for all − but times have changed

  • Written by Allison Mashell Mitchell, Assistant Professor of Civil Rights Studies, University of Notre Dame
imageRepresentatives from the NAACP stand outside the Supreme Court on June 25, 2013, awaiting a decision in Shelby County v. Holder.AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

President Donald Trump appeared on former Deputy FBI Director Dan Bongino’s podcast in February 2026, where he stated: “The Republicans should say, ‘We want to take over, we...

Read more: Federal election observers once played a key role in securing voting rights for all − but times...

The NFL draft brings economic gains – and hidden public safety costs

  • Written by Adam Annaccone, Clinical Associate Professor, Department of Kinesiology, University of Texas at Arlington
imageThe NFL draft is a mass gathering that must be planned as a public safety and emergency response operation. Icon Sportswire via Getty Images

When the NFL draft comes to town, the host city’s hotels, bars and restaurants fill, while its downtown gets three days of national exposure.

Detroit’s 2024 draft drew more than 775,000 fans and...

Read more: The NFL draft brings economic gains – and hidden public safety costs

What Detroit can learn from participatory budgeting processes in NYC, Boston and Brazil

  • Written by Celina Su, Professor of Political Science, CUNY Graduate Center
imageMary Sheffield, center, had already been through 12 budget processes as a City Council member before she was elected mayor of Detroit.City of Detroit/Flickr

Detroit Mayor Mary Sheffield delivered her first State of the City address on March 31, 2026, at Mumford High School on the city’s northwest side.

In the speech, Sheffield touted the...

Read more: What Detroit can learn from participatory budgeting processes in NYC, Boston and Brazil

Students were skipping my astrophysics class to play video games – so I turned the class itself into a video game

  • Written by Jane Charlton, Professor of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Penn State
imageA screenshot from the ‘University of Mars' video game shows a galaxy flight. Jane Charlton , CC BY

When I was a teenager in the early 1980s, I realized the potential of using video games in education. The same high school classmates who couldn’t pass a test at school could somehow remember what potion or scroll to use to tame dozens of...

Read more: Students were skipping my astrophysics class to play video games – so I turned the class itself...

More Articles ...

  1. How long young cancer patients survive often depends on the insurance they have
  2. Astronaut Victor Glover is the latest in a long line of Black American explorers − including York, the enslaved man who played a key role in the Lewis and Clark expedition
  3. ‘Project Hail Mary’ demonstrates how intellectual humility can be a guiding force for scientists and astronauts
  4. Holocaust survivors in France came home to stolen apartments, looted furniture and bureaucratic hurdles
  5. How California’s war on smog and its ambitious car pollution rules made everyone’s air cleaner
  6. How polling failures, gambling legalization and political gridlock paved the way for the explosive rise of prediction markets
  7. From youth bulges to graying societies: The demographic dynamics that are upending the world
  8. Trump Fed pick Kevin Warsh could shake up the central bank with his ‘family fight’ model
  9. Ticks are the backyard threat southwestern Pennsylvania homeowners keep ignoring
  10. Benefits of mindfulness meditation go far beyond relaxation – here’s what it is and how to practice it
  11. Artemis II’s long countdown – a space historian explains why it has taken over 50 years to return to the Moon
  12. How sea mines threaten global trade, and how navies detect them
  13. Decades of hostility between Iran and the US were preceded by a little-remembered century-long friendship
  14. NASA wants to build a base on the Moon by the 2030s – how and why it plans to build up to a long-term lunar presence
  15. Basic income’s appeal today is similar to its roots in 18th-century England – it’s a way to compensate people for a common good taken for private gain
  16. Are multiverses real? An astrophysicist explains why it depends on how you define ‘real’
  17. Panicking scientists, canceled experiments – federal funding cuts turned my work as a research dean into crisis management
  18. Sex test used in IOC’s new transgender ban more likely to exclude from Olympics intersex women who were assigned female at birth
  19. Shiite grief over attacks on Iran’s sacred cities has deep historical roots
  20. We analyzed Philly street scenes and identified signs of gentrification using machine learning trained on longtime residents’ observations
  21. Trump’s ‘God Squad’ pits energy vs. endangered species, but it’s a false choice – protecting wildlife can be good for business
  22. COVID-19 variant BA.3.2 is spreading quickly across US – a doctor explains what you need to know
  23. Ultralightweight sonar plus AI lets tiny drones navigate like bats
  24. What Americans can learn from other civil activism movements against authoritarian regimes
  25. War on Iran during nuclear negotiations undermines the US’s ability to talk peace around the world − and the effects won’t end when Trump leaves office
  26. From ‘Project Hail Mary’ to Artemis II, spaceflight captures audiences when it centers on people because human space travel is hazardous
  27. New study measures titanium in Apollo rock to uncover Moon’s early chemistry
  28. How a diplomatic snub evokes the complicated US-Brazil relationship in the second Trump era
  29. American politicians talk about persecuted Christians abroad – but here’s what happens when those Christians migrate to the US
  30. Why do some people treat the Magic Kingdom and Disney adults like cultural abominations?
  31. Birutė Galdikas: The last of the ‘angels’ in primatology’s most extraordinary chapter
  32. Birutė Galdikas: The last of ‘Leakey’s Angels’ in primatology’s most extraordinary chapter
  33. War in the Middle East made the case for renewables – what’s happening in each country tells a harder story
  34. Cameras have quietly appeared in thousands of US cities – now, their integration with AI is sounding alarms
  35. Two verdicts in two days: How American courts are rewriting the rules for Big Tech and children
  36. I went to CPAC and found Trump supporters unhappy about Iran, Epstein files and the economy, even while the fans at the MAGA conference celebrate his immigration policies
  37. Mosquitoes carrying malaria are evolving more quickly than insecticides can kill them – researchers pinpoint how
  38. Millions are protesting – but boycotts might be key to changing government policies
  39. The long shadow of Paul Ehrlich’s ‘Population Bomb’ is evident in anti-immigration efforts today
  40. Why do basketball players miss shots they’ve made a thousand times before? Neuroscience has an answer
  41. NASA’s Artemis II mission will take an astronaut crew around the Moon – a space policy expert describes the long road to launch
  42. Vagus nerve stimulation shows promise as a way to counter Alzheimer’s disease- and age-related memory loss
  43. College students are writing with AI – but a pilot study finds they’re not simply letting it write for them
  44. Scientists may be overestimating the amount of microplastics in the environment – and the culprit is lab gloves
  45. Supreme Court’s tariff decision still leaves a ‘mess’ for companies trying to grab refunds
  46. Soaring gas prices and disrupted supply chains will ripple out to increase costs in every store and sector of the economy
  47. 2026’s historic snow drought brings worries about water, wildfires and the future in the West
  48. What the historic snow drought means for water, wildfires and the future of the West
  49. On Passover, some Sephardic Jews revisit not only the story of their ancestors, but also their Ladino language
  50. Teens are driving the demand for online abortion pills via telehealth – new research