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Three ways you can just say no to antibiotic drug abuse

  • Written by Debra A. Goff, Clinical Associate Professor of Pharmacy, The Ohio State University
imageWoman resisting pills. Via Shutterstock.From www.shutterstock.com,

Nevada officials in January reported the death of a woman from an infection resistant to every antibiotic available in the U.S, the type of news we will likely hear more about in the future unless health care providers and consumers change their ways.

A high-level report in 2014...

Read more: Three ways you can just say no to antibiotic drug abuse

For endangered species, the road to recovery can be winding and bumpy

  • Written by Peter Alagona, Associate Professor of History, Geography and Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara
imageBald eagles are the best-known example of a successful recovery under the Endangered Species Act.Jerry McFarland/Flickr, CC BY-NC

Anyone who has ever undergone a medical procedure knows that it’s tough to say when you’re fully recovered. The doctor claims you’ll be up and around in three hours, but three days later you feel worse...

Read more: For endangered species, the road to recovery can be winding and bumpy

How Florida is helping train the next generation of cybersecurity professionals

  • Written by Sri Sridharan, Managing Director, Florida Center for Cybersecurity, University of South Florida
imageStudents via shutterstock.com

Our increasingly connected and digital world is vulnerable to attack and needs more skilled professionals who know how to defend it. As connected devices proliferate, particularly smart devices creating what has been called the “Internet of Things,” the problem is getting worse. In 2016, there were 6.4...

Read more: How Florida is helping train the next generation of cybersecurity professionals

What's gone wrong in the seven countries Trump included in his ban? Essential reads

  • Written by Emily Costello, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation
imageSyrian children remove rubble Aleppo, Syria.AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories related to Iraq, Iran, Syria, Yemen, Sudan, Libya and Somalia.

Last week, President Trump signed an executive order temporarily banning citizens from seven countries from entering the U.S. and indefinitely banning...

Read more: What's gone wrong in the seven countries Trump included in his ban? Essential reads

How Tolstoy’s 'War and Peace' can inspire those who fear Trump’s America

  • Written by Ani Kokobobo, Assistant Professor of Russian Literature, University of Kansas
imageA Soviet-era stamp depicts a scene from Leo Tolstoy's 'War and Peace.'Wikimedia Commons

As a professor of Russian literature, I couldn’t help but notice that comedian Aziz Ansari was inadvertently channeling novelist Leo Tolstoy when he claimed that “change doesn’t come from presidents” but from “large groups of angry...

Read more: How Tolstoy’s 'War and Peace' can inspire those who fear Trump’s America

For indigenous communities, fish mean much more than food

  • Written by Yoshitaka Ota, Director (Policy), Nippon Foundation-UBC Nereus Program and Senior Research Associate, University of British Columbia

Along the arid coastline of northwestern Mexico, indigenous Seri communities, who first resisted Spanish rule and then Mexican extermination efforts, eventually gained formal titles over a small part of their ancestral coastal and marine territories. The ocean has always sustained their livelihood, but now they must contend with outside competition...

Read more: For indigenous communities, fish mean much more than food

How distrust of unbelievers runs deep in American history

  • Written by Leigh E. Schmidt, Distinguished University Professor in the Humanities, Washington University in St Louis
image A new megachurch movement is drawing crowds on the basis of belief in nonbelief.AP Photo/Jae C. Hong

Senator Jeff Sessions of Alabama recently raised eyebrows during his confirmation hearing for attorney general when he expressed doubts that secular people respected the truth as much as did those with religious convictions. Even as he insisted...

Read more: How distrust of unbelievers runs deep in American history

How anti-LGBT laws foster a culture of exclusion that harms states' economic prosperity

  • Written by George B. Cunningham, Professor and Associate Dean, Texas A&M University

When it comes to “bathroom bills” and other legislation that curtails the rights of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) individuals, North Carolina was a first actor. But, if some lawmakers have their way, many states, and even the federal government, will quickly follow suit.

So far this year, 11 states have proposed legislat...

Read more: How anti-LGBT laws foster a culture of exclusion that harms states' economic prosperity

It's pedal to the metal for driverless cars

  • Written by William Messner, John R. Beaver Professor of Mechanical Engineering, Tufts University
imageAn NVIDIA-powered Audi needs no driver.AP Photo/John Locher

When a May 2016 crash killed the person operating a Tesla Model S driving in Autopilot mode, advocates of autonomous vehicles feared a slowdown in development of self-driving cars.

Instead the opposite has occurred. In August, Ford publicly committed to field self-driving cars by 2021. In...

Read more: It's pedal to the metal for driverless cars

Do Americans want to buy 'smart' guns?

  • Written by Lacey Wallace, Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice, Pennsylvania State University

Recently legislators and special interest groups have pushed for greater availability of “smart” guns as a safety and crime-reduction tool. Then-President Barack Obama called for more research into “smart” gun technology in January 2016, and that April issued a memorandum calling for government-led research into smart guns...

Read more: Do Americans want to buy 'smart' guns?

More Articles ...

  1. Trump's immigration order is bad foreign policy
  2. What the Bible says about welcoming refugees
  3. SmallSat revolution: Tiny satellites poised to make big contributions to essential science
  4. Why advances in treating those with brain injuries require advances in respecting their rights
  5. As Trump mulls another 'reset' with Russia, he should consider perils of Big Oil diplomacy
  6. Research challenges the view that environmental regulators are anti-business
  7. Trump takes on federal workforce of 2.8 million that's showing signs of stress
  8. What drones may come: The future of unmanned flight approaches
  9. Trump isn’t lying, he’s bullshitting – and it's far more dangerous
  10. 2017 isn't '1984' – it's stranger than Orwell imagined
  11. Exploring the complexities of forgiveness
  12. How the graphic novel got its misleading moniker
  13. The privacy debate over research with your blood and tissue
  14. Far beyond crime-ridden depravity, darknets are key strongholds of freedom of expression online
  15. Six myths about national security intelligence
  16. Trump's policies will affect four groups of undocumented immigrants
  17. From flask to field: How tiny microbes are revolutionizing big agriculture
  18. Why Wall Street's Dow 20,000 is totally meaningless
  19. Why Trump's wall with Mexico is so popular, and why it won't work
  20. How to secure a smartphone for the tweeter-in-chief
  21. Communities plagued by uninsurance also suffer from breakdowns in trust, social connection
  22. It's true, internet surfing during class is not so good for grades
  23. Our psychological biases mean order matters when we judge items in sequence
  24. Understanding net neutrality: Seven essential reads
  25. Trump, trade and the TPP: Seven essential reads
  26. Research shows how to grow more cassava, one of the world's key food crops
  27. Overcoming 'cyber-fatigue' requires users to step up for security
  28. How should you read unnamed sources and leaks?
  29. Why it's hard to 'just get over it' for people who have been traumatized
  30. How a major immigration raid affected infant health
  31. The changing nature of America's irreligious explained
  32. Did Jeff Sessions forget wanting to execute pot dealers?
  33. Mind the gaps: Reducing hunger by improving yields on small farms
  34. Paid family leave policies are expanding, but are new mothers actually taking time off?
  35. Earthquakes triggered by humans pose growing risk
  36. Will Trump negotiate a better coal deal for taxpayers?
  37. China steps up as US steps back from global leadership
  38. Dispatch from DC: On the National Mall, the state of a nation
  39. Donald Trump waves goodbye to era of baby boomer presidents
  40. Trump's cabinet: Eight essential reads
  41. Trump's inaugural speech: Is it morning or mourning in America?
  42. NATO's future when America comes first
  43. Price, author of long proposal to replace Obamacare, short on specifics in hearing
  44. The art of protesting during Donald Trump's presidency
  45. Sultan Donald Trump?
  46. Is part of Chelsea Manning's legacy increased surveillance?
  47. Why each side of the partisan divide thinks the other is living in an alternate reality
  48. Can Trump make real change as president?
  49. Why it's so hard for women to break into the C-suite
  50. Data should smash the biological myth of promiscuous males and sexually coy females