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Sandy Hook lawsuit is latest effort to hold gun makers liable for mass shootings

  • Written by Timothy D. Lytton, Distinguished University Professor & Professor of Law, Georgia State University

Last year families of the Sandy Hook shooting filed a potentially precedent-setting lawsuit. They sued the manufacturer of the AR-15 rifle that Adam Lanza used to gun down 20 schoolchildren and their teachers in a small town in Connecticut in 2012.

On June 20, lawyers for the gun manufacturers tried to dismiss the suit, arguing that federal law...

Read more: Sandy Hook lawsuit is latest effort to hold gun makers liable for mass shootings

2016: the proving ground for political data

  • Written by Daniel Kreiss, Assistant Professor of Media and Journalism, University of North Carolina – Chapel Hill
imageWill campaigns' data use help determine the election?Pie chart via shutterstock.com

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump recently argued that data profiling of prospective voters was “overrated.” He said he plans only “limited” use of data in his quest for the presidency, believing voters care more about...

Read more: 2016: the proving ground for political data

To fight antibiotic resistance, we need to fight bad prescribing habits

  • Written by John Gums, Associate Dean for Clinical Affairs and Professor of Pharmacy and Medicine, University of Florida
imageshutterstockAntibiotics image via www.shutterstock.com.

May’s announcement that a strain of bacteria with genes conferring resistance to colistin, our antibiotic of last resort, was identified in the United States, is just the latest report highlighting the growing threat of antibiotic resistance.

Antibiotic resistance is driven by many...

Read more: To fight antibiotic resistance, we need to fight bad prescribing habits

Expand the draft to women – or repeal it? A long constitutional debate continues

  • Written by Nicholas Mosvick, Ph.D. Candidate, University of Mississippi

The military draft has surfaced again as a source of national debate, as it has throughout American history.

On June 15, the Senate passed a proposal to require women to register with the Selective Service. In the same bill, Senator Rand Paul took the opportunity to introduce an amendment to eliminate the draft entirely.

As a Ph.D. candidate...

Read more: Expand the draft to women – or repeal it? A long constitutional debate continues

Of bears and biases: scientific judgment and the fate of Yellowstone's grizzlies

  • Written by Jeremy T. Bruskotter, Associate Professor of Environment and Natural Resources, The Ohio State University
imageThe grizzly, or brown, bear in the Greater Yellowstone Ecosystem is posed to lose protections under the Endangered Species Act. Jim Peaco, Yellowstone National Park

In March, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS) announced its intent to remove protections afforded by the U.S. Endangered Species Act (ESA) to grizzly bears in the Greater...

Read more: Of bears and biases: scientific judgment and the fate of Yellowstone's grizzlies

Love it or leave it: why the U.K.'s Brexit vote should matter to Americans

  • Written by Terrence Guay, Clinical Professor of International Business, Pennsylvania State University

On June 23, citizens of the United Kingdom will go to the polls to vote on whether their country will remain a member of the European Union. While the outcome will have the greatest impact on residents of Europe, it will also affect the U.S. as well.

And with the latest polls putting the “leave” campaign ahead of those for remaining in...

Read more: Love it or leave it: why the U.K.'s Brexit vote should matter to Americans

Why the first Olympic refugee team may not be the last

  • Written by María Cristina García, Howard A. Newman Professor of American Studies, Department of History and Latino Studies Program, Cornell University

Ten refugee athletes will march into the Maracanã Stadium in Rio de Janeiro on Friday, August 5, 2016. Unlike the other athletes there, they will not represent the countries of their birth, heritage or citizenship. These athletes will comprise the first-ever Olympic refugee team, and they will march under the Olympic flag.

“We want to...

Read more: Why the first Olympic refugee team may not be the last

Big data jobs are out there – are you ready?

  • Written by Jungwoo Ryoo, Associate Professor of Information Sciences and Technology at Altoona campus, Pennsylvania State University
imagePerhaps your career path is paved with big data.Steve Johnson, CC BY

Big data is increasingly becoming part of everyday life. Network security companies use it to improve the accuracy of their intrusion detection services. Dating services use it to help clients find soulmates. It can enhance the efficiency and accuracy of fraud detection, in turn...

Read more: Big data jobs are out there – are you ready?

An epidemic of children dying in hot cars: a tragedy that can be prevented

  • Written by David Diamond, Professor of Psychology, Molecular Pharmacology and Physiology, Director, Neuroscience Collaborative Program and Center for Preclinical and Clinical Research on PTSD, University of South Florida
imageChild in a car seat via ShutterstockCC BY-SA

I have been studying the brain and memory since 1980, but I was baffled when a news reporter asked me in 2004 how parents can forget that their children are in the car with them. It seemed incomprehensible that parents could leave a child in a car and then go about their daily activities, as their child...

Read more: An epidemic of children dying in hot cars: a tragedy that can be prevented

Should ethics professors observe higher standards of behavior?

  • Written by Judith Stark, Professor of Philosophy, Seton Hall University
imageDoes teaching ethics come with obligations?lentina_x, CC BY-NC-SA

This is an enduring dilemma in the area of ethics and one that has recently come to light with charges of unethical behavior brought against a prominent philosopher, Professor Thomas Pogge of Yale University. Pogge has been accused of manipulating younger women in his field into...

Read more: Should ethics professors observe higher standards of behavior?

More Articles ...

  1. Cracking the mystery of the 'Worldwide Hum'
  2. Brexit backers claim U.K. is drowning in EU regulations – are Americans underwater too?
  3. American Medical Association warns of health and safety problems from 'white' LED streetlights
  4. Low testosterone may make you a better father
  5. Is technology making us dumber or smarter? Yes
  6. How the Supreme Court decision on United States v. Texas will affect millions of families
  7. Chemical regulation bill clears Congress, but will it protect the public?
  8. Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party?
  9. Why schools should provide one laptop per child
  10. Fentanyl: widely used, deadly when abused
  11. What we can learn from an Indonesian ethnicity that recognizes five genders
  12. Disrupting pro-ISIS online 'ecosystems' could help thwart real-world terrorism
  13. Appeals court upholds net neutrality rules -- why you should care
  14. Orlando after tragedy: much more than world's theme park
  15. Losing control: The dangers of killer robots
  16. How will we remember black women on the anniversary of the Charleston shooting?
  17. Stanford sexual assault: what changed with the survivor's testimony
  18. Where does anti-LGBT bias come from – and how does it translate into violence?
  19. Why it's so hard for students to have their debts forgiven
  20. Raise a cup -- of coffee; WHO no longer says it can cause cancer
  21. Global warming to expose more people to Zika-spreading mosquito _Aedes aegypti_
  22. In the wake of tragedy, Trump takes rhetoric of fear to a whole new level
  23. LGBT equality doesn't exist – but here's how to fight for it
  24. The Orlando shooting: exploring the link between hate crimes and terrorism
  25. How did Brazil go from rising BRIC to sinking ship?
  26. Fathers also want to ‘have it all,’ study says
  27. The truth about for-profit colleges and Trump University
  28. 48 hours as a Muslim American: A professor reflects
  29. Graphene isn’t the only Lego in the materials-science toy box
  30. How can hospitals possibly prepare for disasters? With practice and planning
  31. Social media is changing our digital news habits – but to varying degrees in US and UK
  32. Finding Nemo – and Dory – is easy. Deciding whether they should be pets is harder
  33. Two violent men, two symptoms of the same sickness
  34. Another mass shooting – what the experts say
  35. Gun researchers see a public health emergency in Orlando mass shooting. Here's why.
  36. Terrorism and tourism: what cities should do to prepare for an attack
  37. Were this year's Tony Awards only a superficial nod to diversity?
  38. Does China manipulate its currency as Donald Trump claims?
  39. New atlas shows extent of light pollution -- what does it mean for our health?
  40. Climate change could alter the chemistry of deepwater lakes and harm ecosystems
  41. Fighting malevolent AI: artificial intelligence, meet cybersecurity
  42. Personal beliefs versus scientific innovation: getting past a flat Earth mentality
  43. Aid to dying: What Jainism -- one of India's oldest religions -- teaches us
  44. How might drone racing drive innovation?
  45. Californians now have right to 'aid in dying': How did we get here?
  46. Can Jude Law's 'Genius' capture the essence of Thomas Wolfe?
  47. Putting CO2 away for good by turning it into stone
  48. Technology is improving – why is rural broadband access still a problem?
  49. How Hillary Clinton's 'smart power' feminism informs her foreign policy
  50. Are some students more at risk of assault on campuses?