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California fire damage to homes is less 'random' than it seems

  • Written by Faith Kearns, Academic Coordinator, California Institute for Water Resources, University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
imageCan California update its building codes to minimize fire damage?AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

In the midst of the many wildfireemergencies that have faced California this year, it can often seem that the way houses burn, or don’t, is random.

The thing is, though, it’s not. Firefighters and researchers alike have a pretty solid understanding of...

Read more: California fire damage to homes is less 'random' than it seems

Who's to blame for keeping Time's #MeToo 'silence breakers' silent?

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon
imageTime magazine recognized the #MeToo movement as its 'person' of the year.Faye Sadou/MediaPunch/IPX

Time magazine just named the #MeToo movement its “person” of the year, recognizing the women and men who raised their voices against abuses of power as the “silence breakers.”

For decades, victims of sexual harassment have...

Read more: Who's to blame for keeping Time's #MeToo 'silence breakers' silent?

Eating out might be devouring your food budget – and you probably have no idea

  • Written by Amit Sharma, Professor, Hospitality Finance, Director, Food Decisions Research Laboratory, Pennsylvania State University
imageDiners eat at Katz's Delicatessen in New York, New York.Seth Wenig/AP Photo

If you were to guess how much you spend on eating out per month, chances are you’ll miss the mark by a quite a bit.

In a recent study, I found that adults tend to underestimate how much they spend on eating out by more than twice what they’re actually spending.

Th...

Read more: Eating out might be devouring your food budget – and you probably have no idea

Why Trump's evangelical supporters welcome his move on Jerusalem

  • Written by Julie Ingersoll, Professor of Religious Studies, University of North Florida
imageWhy Jerusalem matters to evangelicals.jaime.silva, CC BY-NC-ND

President Trump’s announcement on Wednesday, Dec. 6 that the U.S. would recognize Jerusalem as the capital of Israel received widespread criticism. Observers quickly recognized the decision as related not so much to national security concerns as to domestic U.S. politics and...

Read more: Why Trump's evangelical supporters welcome his move on Jerusalem

Can Atlanta's new mayor revive America's 'black mecca'?

  • Written by Maurice J. Hobson, Assistant Professor of African-American Studies, Georgia State University
imageKeisha Lance Bottoms.AP Photo/John Bazemore

The Atlanta mayoral showdown between Keisha Lance Bottoms and Mary Norwood was a political battle 30 years in the making.

Atlanta was poised to elect its first white mayor in decades. However, Bottoms, who is black, claimed a narrow victory with a few hundred votes more than her opponent. Norwood, who is...

Read more: Can Atlanta's new mayor revive America's 'black mecca'?

Hanukkah's true meaning is about Jewish survival

  • Written by Alan Avery-Peck, Kraft-Hiatt Professor in Judaic Studies, College of the Holy Cross
imagewww.shutterstock.com

Beginning on the evening of Dec. 12, Jews will celebrate the eight-day festival of Hanukkah, perhaps the best-known and certainly the most visible Jewish holiday.

While critics sometimes identify Christmas as promoting the prevalence in America today of what one might refer to as Hanukkah kitsch, this assessment misses the...

Read more: Hanukkah's true meaning is about Jewish survival

DNA has gone digital – what could possibly go wrong?

  • Written by Jenna E. Gallegos, Postdoctoral Researcher in Chemical and Biological Engineering, Colorado State University
imageModern advances come with new liabilities.Sergey Nivens/Shutterstock.com

Biology is becoming increasingly digitized. Researchers like us use computers to analyze DNA, operate lab equipment and store genetic information. But new capabilities also mean new risks – and biologists remain largely unaware of the potential vulnerabilities that come...

Read more: DNA has gone digital – what could possibly go wrong?

Exposure to wildfire smoke: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Richard E. Peltier, Associate Professor of Environmental Health Sciences, University of Massachusetts Amherst
imageFlames and smoke shroud State Route 33 as a wildfire burns in Ventura, California, Dec. 5, 2017. Daniel Dreifuss via AP

Editor’s note: Wildfires once again are raging in California – this time in the Los Angeles area, where five fires are currently burning. The fast-moving Thomas fire alone has burned more than 65,000 acres in three...

Read more: Exposure to wildfire smoke: 5 questions answered

The GOP tax plan, state and local taxes deductions – and you

  • Written by Capri Cafaro, Executive in Residence, American University
imageThe Capitol is lit up at dawn on Nov. 30, 2017 as Senate Republicans work to pass their sweeping tax bill.AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

While Washington is claiming victory, states are crying foul.

Late last week, the U.S. Senate passed its version of the tax reform package that cleared the House a few weeks earlier. Within the hundreds of pages of...

Read more: The GOP tax plan, state and local taxes deductions – and you

What better forensic science can reveal about the JFK assassination

  • Written by Clifford Spiegelman, Distinguished Professor of Statistics, Texas A&M University
imageThe immediate aftermath of the shooting of President Kennedy in November 1963.AP Photo/Mary Ann Moorman

Popular television shows such as the “Law & Order,” “CSI” and “NCIS” franchises glorify forensic science as a magical, near-flawless tool for identifying criminals. Not surprisingly, Hollywood’s...

Read more: What better forensic science can reveal about the JFK assassination

More Articles ...

  1. CVS merger with Aetna: Health care cure or curse?
  2. Why aren't Hollywood films more diverse? The international box office might be to blame
  3. How the tax package could sap the flow of charitable giving
  4. Literature has long been sounding the alarm about sexual violence in Hollywood
  5. How a group of California nuns challenged the Catholic Church
  6. Venezuela's elections are just a new way for Maduro to cling to power
  7. Bajo Maduro, las elecciones venezolanas son otra forma de mantener el poder
  8. The obscure federal agency that soon could raise your electric bill: 5 questions answered on FERC
  9. President Trump's national monument rollback is illegal and likely to be reversed in court
  10. The constitutional right to education is long overdue
  11. Why the president's anti-Muslim tweets could increase tensions
  12. A new collaborative approach to investigate what happens in the brain when it makes a decision
  13. How the tax bill opens wide a big back door to overhaul health care
  14. Turning hurricanes into music: Can listening to storms help us understand them better?
  15. Two little-known ways GOP tax bill would make chasm between rich and poor even wider
  16. Taking a second look at the learn-to-code craze
  17. Should lying to the FBI be a crime?
  18. When should you unfriend someone on Facebook?
  19. Why psychiatrists should not be involved in presidential politics
  20. Historic tax overhaul nears finish line: 5 essential reads
  21. The new tax bill will make Americans less healthy – and that's bad for the economy
  22. The latest threat to peace in Colombia: Congress
  23. The GOP doesn't care if you like their tax plan. Here's why
  24. The GOP doesn't care if you like its tax plan. Here's why
  25. Tax bill's attack on higher education undermines America's economic vitality
  26. Is the British monarchy actually adapting to changing social norms?
  27. Teaching machines to teach themselves
  28. Could the ERA pass in the #Metoo era?
  29. Why society should talk about forced sex in intimate relationships, too
  30. Stop criticizing bizarrely shaped voting districts. They might not be gerrymandered after all
  31. Who are the Baha'is and why are they so persecuted?
  32. Charles Manson and the perversion of the American dream
  33. In growing algae for biofuels, it matters who used the water last
  34. Why Silicon Valley wants you to text and drive
  35. Atomic age began 75 years ago with the first controlled nuclear chain reaction
  36. Got a boss who denies reality? A behavioral scientist's guide to tactful truth telling
  37. Kurdistan earthquake: politics creates roadblocks to relief
  38. Kurdistan earthquake: Politics create roadblocks to relief
  39. A tax increase that's proven to save lives
  40. As students near graduation, career and technical education provides a boost
  41. Living and aging well with HIV: New strategies and new research
  42. Rosie the Riveters discovered a wartime California dream
  43. Has Trump's presidency triggered the movement against sexual harassment?
  44. Taxpayers want more fairness. GOP plan to 'reform' the tax code doesn't deliver
  45. When envisioning the future of TV, think of a shopping mall
  46. Fewer crops are feeding more people worldwide – and that's not good
  47. An ethical guide to responsible giving
  48. The messy reality of religious liberty in America
  49. Philip Morris hides data in plain sight on dangers of new heat-not-burn product
  50. An armed robber's Supreme Court case could affect all Americans' digital privacy for decades to come