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More than two dozen cities and states are suing Big Oil over climate change – they just got a boost from the US Supreme Court

  • Written by Patrick Parenteau, Professor of Law Emeritus, Vermont Law & Graduate School

Honolulu has lost more than 5 miles of its famous beaches to sea level rise and storm surges. Sunny-day flooding during high tides makes many city roads impassable, and water mains for the public drinking water system are corroding from saltwater because of sea level rise.

The damage has left the city and county spending millions of dollars on...

Read more: More than two dozen cities and states are suing Big Oil over climate change – they just got a...

Salman Rushdie renews fight against book-banning -- 3 essential articles on right-wing challenges to what schoolkids can read

  • Written by Howard Manly, Race + Equity Editor, The Conversation US
imageSalman Rushdie speaks at the PEN America Literary Gala on May 18, 2023, in New York City.Jamie McCarthy/Getty Images for PEN America

No one needs to tell Salman Rushdie about the cost of free speech.

In 1989, Rushdie’s novel “The Satanic Verses” triggered the ire of Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, who called for the...

Read more: Salman Rushdie renews fight against book-banning -- 3 essential articles on right-wing challenges...

Coca-Cola's biggest challenge in greening its operations is its own global marketing strategy

  • Written by Bart Elmore, Professor of History, The Ohio State University
imageEgyptian workers push Coca-Cola branded refrigerators, provided free to grocers, through a Cairo street.Mohammed Al-Sehiti/AFP via Getty Images

Coca-Cola is one of the world’s most widely recognized brands. Its global reach, spanning more than 200 countries, was the theme of a 2020 commercial that showed families drinking Coke with their...

Read more: Coca-Cola's biggest challenge in greening its operations is its own global marketing strategy

What Greek mythology teaches us about women’s resistance and rebellion

  • Written by Marie-Claire Beaulieu, Associate Professor of Classical Studies, Tufts University

After some hard-fought victories, women’s rights are threatened again in many parts of the world. In the United States, the Supreme Court overturned women’s right to abortion in June 2022; women have also been leaving the workforce since the COVID-19 pandemic, in many cases to care for children and elderly relatives. In other parts of...

Read more: What Greek mythology teaches us about women’s resistance and rebellion

New approach to teaching computer science could broaden the subject's appeal

  • Written by Lauren Margulieux, Associate Professor of Learning Technologies, Georgia State University
imageLanguage arts students can program chatbots for literary characters.shironosov/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Despite growing demand for computer science skills in professional careers and many areas of life, K-12 schools struggle to teach computer science to the next generation.

However, a new approach to computer science education – called integrat...

Read more: New approach to teaching computer science could broaden the subject's appeal

White House plan to combat antisemitism needs to take on centuries of hatred, discrimination and even lynching in America

  • Written by Pamela S. Nadell, Professor and Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women's & Gender History and Director of the Jewish Studies Program, American University
imageBess Myerson, center, was crowned Miss America in 1945, but was turned away from hotels that did not admit Jews when she went on tour. AP photo/Sam Myers

As reported antisemitic incidents in the U.S. in 2022 soared to an all-time high, the White House began developing plans to combat this hate, proclaiming in an official statement, “antisemiti...

Read more: White House plan to combat antisemitism needs to take on centuries of hatred, discrimination and...

White House plan to combat antisemitism takes on centuries of hatred, discrimination and even lynching in America

  • Written by Pamela S. Nadell, Professor and Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women's & Gender History and Director of the Jewish Studies Program, American University
imageBess Myerson, center, was crowned Miss America in 1945, but was turned away from hotels that did not admit Jews when she went on tour. AP photo/Sam Myers

As reported antisemitic incidents in the U.S. in 2022 soared to an all-time high, the White House began developing plans to combat this hate, proclaiming in an official statement, “antisemiti...

Read more: White House plan to combat antisemitism takes on centuries of hatred, discrimination and even...

Chronic pain can be objectively measured using brain signals – new research

  • Written by Prasad Shirvalkar, Associate Professor of Anesthesia, University of California, San Francisco
imageResearchers are working on untangling the neural circuitry of chronic and acute pain.Victor Habbick Visions/Science Photo Library via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Using a brain implant that can record neural signals over many months, my research teamand I have discovered objective...

Read more: Chronic pain can be objectively measured using brain signals – new research

Trans joy and family bonds are big parts of the transgender experience lost in media coverage and anti-trans legislation

  • Written by Derek P. Siegel, Ph.D. Candidate, Sociology, UMass Amherst
imageSome trans people find gender euphoria in being mothers and being with family.rparobe/E+ via Getty Images

Since the beginning of 2023, 49 U.S. state legislatures have introduced over 500 anti-trans bills. While mainstream media increasingly cover violence and legislative attacks against trans people, many scholars and activists worry that focusing...

Read more: Trans joy and family bonds are big parts of the transgender experience lost in media coverage and...

What is a black box? A computer scientist explains what it means when the inner workings of AIs are hidden

  • Written by Saurabh Bagchi, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, Purdue University
imageYou can't see inside any opaque box, but the color black adds an air of mystery.chingraph/iStock via Getty Images

For some people, the term “black box” brings to mind the recording devices in airplanes that are valuable for postmortem analyses if the unthinkable happens. For others it evokes small, minimally outfitted theaters. But...

Read more: What is a black box? A computer scientist explains what it means when the inner workings of AIs...

More Articles ...

  1. Gravitational wave detector LIGO is back online after 3 years of upgrades – how the world's most sensitive yardstick reveals secrets of the universe
  2. AI is changing how Americans find jobs, get promoted and succeed at work
  3. GOP's proposed expansion of SNAP work requirements targets many low-income people in their early 50s – but many of them already work
  4. Shavuot: The Jewish holiday that became all about children
  5. How can I make studying a daily habit?
  6. Warhol Foundation v. Goldsmith: Supreme Court rules for income streams over artistic freedom
  7. How wildfire smoke can harm human health, even when the fire is hundreds of miles away – a toxicologist explains
  8. Unionized bodies in topless bar! Strippers join servers and baristas in new labor movement
  9. Balance declines with age, but exercise can help stave off some of the risk of falling
  10. Military drones are swarming the skies of Ukraine and other conflict hot spots – and anything goes when it comes to international law
  11. Talking puppy or finger puppet? 5 tips for buying baby toys that support healthy development
  12. When faith says to help migrants – and the law says don't
  13. Parasitic infections hit the health of low-income Black communities where states have neglected sewage systems
  14. Craft breweries are fermenting change, addressing local ills while serving local ales
  15. When wolves move in, they push smaller carnivores closer to human development – with deadly consequences
  16. ChatGPT-powered Wall Street: The benefits and perils of using artificial intelligence to trade stocks and other financial instruments
  17. 'Rhetoric' doesn't need to be such an ugly word – it has a lot to teach echo-chambered America
  18. Feinstein just the latest example of an old problem: Politicians have long been able to evade questions about their ability to serve
  19. IRS granted tax-exempt status to extremists, including an Oath Keepers foundation – here’s why that’s not as surprising as it sounds
  20. Teenage brains are drawn to popular social media challenges – here's how parents can get their kids to think twice
  21. From sit-ins in the 1960s to uprisings in the new millennium, Harry Belafonte served as a champion of youth activism
  22. 'Mistaken, misread, misquoted, mislabeled, and mis-spoken' -- what Woody Guthrie wrote about the national debt debate in Congress during the Depression
  23. Pivotal points in the COVID-19 pandemic – 5 essential reads
  24. Symbols of the Confederacy are slowly coming down from US military bases: 3 essential reads
  25. Attacks on 'segregated' graduation ceremonies overlook the history of racism on campus
  26. Three lessons from Aristotle on friendship
  27. Barbara Kingsolver's 'Demon Copperhead' and the enduring devastation of the opioid crisis
  28. Vaccines using mRNA can protect farm animals against diseases traditional ones may not – and there are safeguards to ensure they won't end up in your food
  29. Bees can learn, remember, think and make decisions – here's a look at how they navigate the world
  30. Lack of affordable childcare is hurting young farm families' ability to grow their businesses – the US farm bill may finally offer some help
  31. How China uses 'geostrategic corruption' to exert its influence in Latin America
  32. War rooms and bailouts: How banks and the Fed are preparing for a US default – and the chaos expected to follow
  33. Sunzi, 'shì' and strategy: How to read 'Art of War' the way its author intended
  34. Gay men can now donate blood after FDA changes decades-old rule – a health policy researcher explains the benefits
  35. EPA’s crackdown on power plant emissions is a big first step – but without strong certification, it will be hard to ensure captured carbon stays put
  36. International Criminal Court is using digital evidence to investigate Putin – but how can it tell if a video or photo is real or fake?
  37. The Nation of Islam: A brief history
  38. COVID-19's total cost to the economy in US will reach $14 trillion by end of 2023 – new research
  39. Want more good ideas from your workers? Try giving them a reward – and a choice
  40. US has a long history of state lawmakers silencing elected Black officials and taking power from their constituents
  41. A brief history of debt ceiling crises and the political chaos they've unleashed
  42. Meditative mothering? How Buddhism honors both compassionate caregiving and celibate monks and nuns
  43. What is carbon capture and storage? EPA’s new power plant standards proposal gives it a boost, but CCS is not a quick solution
  44. 'Courage is contagious': Daniel Ellsberg's decision to release the Pentagon Papers didn't happen in a vacuum
  45. 4 factors that contributed to the record low history scores for US eighth graders
  46. From Kali to Mary to Neopagan goddesses, religions revere motherhood in sometimes unexpected ways
  47. What does ending the emergency status of the COVID-19 pandemic in the US mean in practice? 4 questions answered
  48. George Santos indicted on fraud, money laundering and other criminal charges -- 3 essential reads
  49. Passport bottleneck is holding up international travel by Americans eager to see the world as COVID-19 eases
  50. I unintentionally created a biased AI algorithm 25 years ago – tech companies are still making the same mistake