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Senate approves nearly $61B of Ukraine foreign aid − here’s why it helps the US to keep funding Ukraine

  • Written by Tatsiana Kulakevich, Associate Professor of Instruction in the School of Interdisciplinary Global Studies, Affiliate Professor at the Institute for Russian, European, and Eurasian Studies, University of South Florida
imageFlags for the United States and Ukraine billow outside of the Capitol building on April 23, 2024. Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

The Senate overwhelmingly approved a US$95.3 billion foreign aid funding package for Ukraine, Israel and Taiwan on April 23, 2024, following months of political infighting that stalled the bill in the House of...

Read more: Senate approves nearly $61B of Ukraine foreign aid − here’s why it helps the US to keep funding...

Supreme Court appears open to Starbucks’ claims in labor-organizing case

  • Written by Michael Z. Green, Professor of Law and Director, Workplace Law Program, Texas A&M University
imageMore than 400 Starbucks shops have voted to join a union so far.AP Photo/Joshua Bessex

What factors must a court consider when the National Labor Relations Board requests an order requiring an employer to rehire terminated workers before the completion of unfair labor practice proceedings?

That’s the central question that the Supreme Court...

Read more: Supreme Court appears open to Starbucks’ claims in labor-organizing case

Should family members be in charge of family businesses? We analyzed 175 studies to understand when having a family CEO pays off

  • Written by Vitaliy Skorodziyevskiy, Assistant Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship, University of Louisville

From Hermes to Smuckers to the fictional Waystar Royco of HBO’s “Succession,” family businesses often choose their CEOs from the ranks of kin. But is this a good business decision? As researcherswhostudyentrepreneurshipand management, we wanted to know whether keeping leadership in the family pays off for businesses. So we...

Read more: Should family members be in charge of family businesses? We analyzed 175 studies to understand...

What you eat could alter your unborn children and grandchildren’s genes and health outcomes

  • Written by Nathaniel Johnson, Assistant Professor of Nutrition and Dietetics, University of North Dakota
imageThe relatively new discipline of epigenetics explores how diet and nutrition can affect not only our own health but that of future generations.Drazen Zigic/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Within the last century, researchers’ understanding of genetics has undergone a profound transformation.

Genes, regions of DNA that are largely responsible for...

Read more: What you eat could alter your unborn children and grandchildren’s genes and health outcomes

Can states prevent doctors from giving emergency abortions, even if federal law requires them to do so? The Supreme Court will decide

  • Written by Naomi Cahn, Professor of Law, University of Virginia
imageDemonstrators protest outside the Supreme Court building shortly before the court heard arguments about mifepristone on March 26, 2024.Michael Nigro/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images

Hospitals across the country have long operated under the same federal law that says they must treat and stabilize all patients when they have a medical...

Read more: Can states prevent doctors from giving emergency abortions, even if federal law requires them to...

Teacher lawsuits over forced grade inflation won’t fix unfair grading – here’s what could

  • Written by Laura Link, Associate Professor of Teaching and Leadership, University of North Dakota
imageSome teachers are resisting efforts to give students grades they believe they haven't earned. skynesher via Getty Images

After refusing to give some students grades they hadn’t earned, high school chemistry teacher Toni Ognibene sued the Clovis Unified School District in California for allegedly retaliating against her. The lawsuit was filed...

Read more: Teacher lawsuits over forced grade inflation won’t fix unfair grading – here’s what could

Opening statements are the most important part of a trial – as lawyers in Trump’s hush money case know well

  • Written by Ronald S. Sullivan Jr., Professor of Law, Harvard University
imageFormer U.S. President Donald Trump enters Manhattan Criminal Court on April 22, 2024. Victor J. Blue - Pool/Getty Images

Though Hollywood movies about courtroom dramas often glamorize the closing arguments given by lawyers, in reality the opening statement is likely the most important single event of a trial.

Such was the case in the hush money...

Read more: Opening statements are the most important part of a trial – as lawyers in Trump’s hush money case...

Passover: The festival of freedom and the ambivalence of exile

  • Written by Nancy E. Berg, Professor of Comparative Literature, Arts & Sciences at Washington University in St. Louis
imageThe Passover Seder – like this one in Azerbaijan – commemorates the story of the Israelites' escape from slavery, and the start of their long sojourn in the desert. Reza/Getty Images

The Jewish holiday cycle is, to a large extent, an exploration and commemoration of the experience of exile. The fall festival of Sukkot, for example, is...

Read more: Passover: The festival of freedom and the ambivalence of exile

What I teach Harvard Law School students about opening arguments

  • Written by Ronald S. Sullivan Jr., Professor of Law, Harvard University
imageFormer U.S. President Donald Trump appears in Manhattan Criminal Court on April 19, 2024.Sarah Yenesel - Pool/Getty Images

Though Hollywood movies about courtroom dramas often glamorize the closing arguments given by lawyers, in reality the opening statement is likely the most important single event of a trial.

Lawyers in the hush money case...

Read more: What I teach Harvard Law School students about opening arguments

Cannabis legalization has led to a boom in potent forms of the drug that present new hazards for adolescents

  • Written by Ty Schepis, Professor of Psychology, Texas State University
imageMany of today's cannabis products barely resemble the 'weed' that most middle-aged adults grew up with. VladK213/iStock via Getty Images

Eventually, most adults reach a point where we realize we are out of touch with those much younger than us.

Perhaps it is a pop culture reference that sparks the realization. For me, this moment happened when I...

Read more: Cannabis legalization has led to a boom in potent forms of the drug that present new hazards for...

More Articles ...

  1. Chemical pollutants can change your skin bacteria and increase your eczema risk − new research explores how
  2. Transporting hazardous materials across the country isn’t easy − that’s why there’s a host of regulations in place
  3. What cities can learn from Seattle’s racial and social justice law
  4. The Anglican Communion has deep differences over homosexuality – but a process of dialogue, known as ‘via media,’ has helped hold contradictory beliefs together
  5. Death of Marine commander scarred by 1983 Beirut bombing serves as reminder of risks US troops stationed in Middle East still face
  6. EU migration overhaul stresses fast-track deportations and limited appeal rights for asylum seekers
  7. Are race-conscious scholarships on their way out?
  8. Why don’t female crickets chirp?
  9. UAW wins big at Volkswagen in Tennessee – its first victory at a foreign-owned factory in the American South
  10. TikTok fears point to larger problem: Poor media literacy in the social media age
  11. From sumptuous engravings to stick-figure sketches, Passover Haggadahs − and their art − have been evolving for centuries
  12. South Korean President Yoon faces foreign policy challenges after the National Assembly election
  13. How Trump is using courtroom machinations to his political advantage
  14. Are tomorrow’s engineers ready to face AI’s ethical challenges?
  15. Getting a good night’s rest is vital for neurodiverse children – pediatric sleep experts explain why
  16. Caring for older Americans’ teeth and gums is essential, but Medicare generally doesn’t cover that cost
  17. Wild turkey numbers are falling in some parts of the US – the main reason may be habitat loss
  18. The tragedy of sudden unexpected infant deaths – and how bedsharing, maternal smoking and stomach sleeping all contribute
  19. Graduation rates for low-income students lag while their student loan debt soars
  20. Columbia president holds her own under congressional grilling over campus antisemitism that felled the leaders of Harvard and Penn
  21. The luck of the puck in the Stanley Cup – why chance plays such a big role in hockey
  22. 3 things to learn about patience − and impatience − from al-Ghazali, a medieval Islamic scholar
  23. Why luck plays such a big role in hockey
  24. Billions of cicadas are about to emerge from underground in a rare double-brood convergence
  25. Cities with Black women police chiefs had less street violence during 2020’s Black Lives Matter protests
  26. 5 years after the Mueller report into Russian meddling in the 2016 US election on behalf of Trump: 4 essential reads
  27. AI chatbots refuse to produce ‘controversial’ output − why that’s a free speech problem
  28. Oman serves as a crucial back channel between Iran and the US as tensions flare in the Middle East
  29. Ireland at the crossroads: Can the ancient Brehon laws guide the republic away from anti-immigrant sentiment?
  30. Removing PFAS from public water systems will cost billions and take time – here are ways you can filter out harmful ‘forever chemicals’ at home
  31. Saturn’s ocean moon Enceladus is able to support life − my research team is working out how to detect extraterrestrial cells there
  32. Fermented foods sustain both microbiomes and cultural heritage
  33. Native American voices are finally factoring into energy projects – a hydropower ruling is a victory for environmental justice on tribal lands
  34. Reagan’s great America shining on a hill twisted into Trump’s dark vision of Christian nationalism
  35. Know thyself − all too well: Why Taylor Swift’s songs are philosophy
  36. Worried about housing shortages and soaring prices? Your community’s zoning laws could be part of the problem
  37. Other states, like Arizona, could resurrect laws on abortion, LGBTQ+ issues and more that have been lying dormant for more than 100 years
  38. ‘The former guy’ versus ‘Sleepy Joe’ – why Biden and Trump are loath to utter each other’s name
  39. Supreme Court to consider whether local governments can make it a crime to sleep outside if no inside space is available
  40. More climate-warming methane leaks into the atmosphere than ever gets reported – here’s how satellites can find the leaks and avoid wasting a valuable resource
  41. In the age of cancel culture, shaming can be healthy for online communities – a political scientist explains when and how
  42. Indian protesters pull from poetic tradition to resist Modi’s Hindu nationalism
  43. Grizzly bear conservation is as much about human relationships as it is the animals
  44. Exploding stars send out powerful bursts of energy − I’m leading a citizen scientist project to classify and learn about these bright flashes
  45. Drugs that aren’t antibiotics can also kill bacteria − new method pinpoints how
  46. Deepfake detection improves when using algorithms that are more aware of demographic diversity
  47. The US is losing access to its bases in Niger − here’s why that’s a big deal
  48. Foundations are using so many confusing words that few people can figure out what they’re doing
  49. Trump’s New York felony charges are going to trial – what the images might show when the business fraud case kicks off
  50. Germany’s turning point: 2 years into strategic pivot, progress made bodes well for the US, NATO and the world