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Trump plan to execute 'big drug pushers' will do nothing to stop opioid overdoses

  • Written by Angélica Durán-Martínez, Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Massachusetts Lowell

On March 19, President Donald Trump unveiled his administration’s plan to stem the opioid overdose crisis in the United States, which has claimed some 350,000 lives since 2000. Among other measures, it proposes severe punishment for people involved in the illegal drug trade, including longer minimum jail sentences and potentially the death...

Read more: Trump plan to execute 'big drug pushers' will do nothing to stop opioid overdoses

Who is John Bolton and what does he want?

  • Written by Steven Feldstein, Frank and Bethine Church Chair of Public Affairs & Associate Professor, School of Public Service, Boise State University
John Bolton.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

President Donald Trump’s announcement on March 22 that John Bolton would become the new national security adviser took the policy world – and Bolton – by surprise.

Bolton’s hawkish views are well known. During his run as a Fox News commentator, he advocated for preemptively bombing North Korea...

Read more: Who is John Bolton and what does he want?

Trump's go-it-alone approach to China trade ignores WTO's better way to win

  • Written by Charles Hankla, Associate Professor of Political Science, Georgia State University
Trump may have launched first salvo in a trade war.AP Photo/Ng Han Guan

President Donald Trump seems to be changing his tune on trade.

On March 8, he imposed across-the-board tariffs on the importation of steel and aluminum, angering allies and adversaries alike. Exactly two weeks later, the president launched a new salvo in what could turn into an...

Read more: Trump's go-it-alone approach to China trade ignores WTO's better way to win

What the staff does matters more than what's in an organization's mission statement

  • Written by David Berlan, Assistant Professor of Public Administration, Askew School of Public Administration and Policy, Florida State University
The late Sen. Ted Kennedy, reading from "A Nation of Immigrants," a book by his brother, President John F. KennedyAP Photo/Dennis Cook

Mission statements, not normally in the news, are getting more attention than usual.

The U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, the Department of Housing and Urban Development, the StateDepartment and other...

Read more: What the staff does matters more than what's in an organization's mission statement

Kids' fitness is improving, but they still aren't as fit as their parents were

  • Written by Grant Tomkinson, Professor, University of North Dakota
Kids' aerobic fitness declined for several decades but shows signs of improving in some countries.stockforce/Shutterstock.com

Physical fitness is important for success in sports and athletics, but it is also important for good health. If you are generally fit, you probably have a strong heart, brain, muscles and bones, all of which help you to...

Read more: Kids' fitness is improving, but they still aren't as fit as their parents were

Babe Ruth in a kimono: How baseball diplomacy has fortified Japan-US relations

  • Written by Steven Wisensale, Professor of Public Policy, University of Connecticut
Tokyoites watch Hideo Nomo pitch for the Los Angeles Dodgers at Sony Plaza on June 30, 1995.Shizuo Kambayashi/AP Photo

On Feb. 9, 2001, an American submarine, the USS Greenville, surfaced beneath the Ehime Maru, a Japanese ship filled with high school students who were training to become fishermen. The ship sank, and nine students and teachers died....

Read more: Babe Ruth in a kimono: How baseball diplomacy has fortified Japan-US relations

Congress left a little something for waiters and dishwashers in its $1.3 trillion budget

  • Written by Nicole Hallett, Assistant Clinical Professor of Law, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
Lawmakers have been generous. Trudy Wilkerson/Shutterstock.com

While federal workers were breathing a sigh of relief that Congress managed to avoid a government shutdown, another group of workers also had reason to cheer. That’s because hidden deep in the US$1.3 trillion budget deal that President Donald Trump signed on March 23 was a measure...

Read more: Congress left a little something for waiters and dishwashers in its $1.3 trillion budget

The countries that trust Facebook the most are also the most vulnerable to its mistakes

  • Written by Bhaskar Chakravorti, Senior Associate Dean, International Business & Finance, The Fletcher School, Tufts University
Every month, over two billion people worldwide log into Facebook.hxdbzxy/shutterstock.com

The latest shoe has dropped on Facebook: Private data on 50 million users found its way to a shadowy research outfit, Global Science Research, and then on to Cambridge Analytica, a political consulting firm launched by former White House adviser Steve Bannon.

Zu...

Read more: The countries that trust Facebook the most are also the most vulnerable to its mistakes

The everyday ethical challenges of self-driving cars

  • Written by Johannes Himmelreich, Interdisciplinary Ethics Fellow, Stanford University McCoy Family Center for Ethics in Society
Decisions made by engineers today will determine how all cars drive.Grendelkhan, CC BY-SA

A lot of discussion and ethicalthought about self-driving cars have focused on tragic dilemmas, like hypotheticals in which a car has to decide whether to run over a group of schoolchildren or plunge off a cliff, killing its own occupants. But those sorts of...

Read more: The everyday ethical challenges of self-driving cars

Culture of trust is key for school safety

  • Written by Calvin Morrill, Stefan A. Riesenfeld Professor of Law and Professor of Sociology, University of California, Berkeley
Tight security measures in schools erode cultures of trust, researchers contend.Monkey Business Images/Shutterstock

When we first visited the school that is the focus of our forthcoming book, “Navigating Conflict: How Youth Handle Trouble in a High-Poverty School,” back in 1995, students were free to move about campus during lunch and...

Read more: Culture of trust is key for school safety

More Articles ...

  1. Self-driving cars can't be perfectly safe – what's good enough? 3 questions answered
  2. Los 'juegos' políticos con el agua del que son víctimas los mexicanos
  3. A return to earmarks could grease the wheels in Congress
  4. Betsy DeVos said Common Core was 'dead' – it's not
  5. New federal program tackles spiraling costs of college textbooks
  6. Do you believe in miracles? Why they make perfect sense for many
  7. The ideal female body type is getting even harder to attain
  8. Fewer diplomats, more armed force defines US leadership today
  9. Trump's $60 billion in China tariffs will create more problems than they solve
  10. Gun control and March for Our Lives: 4 essential reads
  11. March for Our Lives awakens the spirit of student and media activism of the 1960s
  12. 'Big Tech' isn't one big monopoly – it's 5 companies all in different businesses
  13. Why Trump will weather Stormy
  14. Why community and not confinement will end TB
  15. Archbishop Oscar Romero was gunned down inside his own church 38 years ago. Soon he'll become El Salvador's first saint
  16. Inching closer to a world without polio
  17. Federal employees work for both Democrats and Republicans – even Kellyanne Conway
  18. Don't quit Facebook, but don't trust it, either
  19. La esterilización forzada perjudicó a miles en California, especialmente a las mujeres latinas
  20. Forced sterilization programs in California once harmed thousands – particularly Latinas
  21. Mitochondria mutation mystery solved: Random sorting helps get rid of duds
  22. Want to fight crime? Plant some flowers with your neighbor
  23. How energy storage is starting to rewire the electricity industry
  24. School resource officers can prevent tragedies, but training is key
  25. Public support for animal rights goes beyond keeping dogs out of overhead bins
  26. Red state, blue state: How colors took sides in politics
  27. How do forensic engineers investigate bridge collapses, like the one in Miami?
  28. I treat patients on Medicaid, and I don't see undeserving poor people
  29. Regulating Facebook won't prevent data breaches
  30. After Tempe fatality, self-driving car developers must engage with public now or risk rejection
  31. Bombed into oblivion: The lost oasis of Damascus
  32. Asians could opt out of naming a country of origin on the 2020 census, a policymaker's nightmare
  33. A clue for how to reduce HIV transmission when using hormonal contraceptives
  34. Threat assessments crucial to prevent school shootings
  35. Think Facebook can manipulate you? Look out for virtual reality
  36. Facebook is killing democracy with its personality profiling data
  37. Tariffs won't save American steel jobs. But we can still help steelworkers
  38. Buried, altered, silenced: 4 ways government climate information has changed since Trump took office
  39. Eager to dye your hair with 'nontoxic' graphene nanoparticles? Not so fast!
  40. On his 250th birthday, Joseph Fourier's math still makes a difference
  41. Some officials want to ban school suspensions – here's how that could backfire
  42. Merit matters in US immigration, but agreeing on what 'merit' means is complicated
  43. Silver nanoparticles in clothing wash out – and may threaten human health and the environment
  44. Why Denmark dominates the World Happiness Report rankings year after year
  45. MS-13 is a street gang, not a drug cartel – and the difference matters
  46. Trump believes he can make an Israeli-Palestinian deal. Don't hold your breath
  47. Kurdish troops fight for freedom — and women's equality — on battlegrounds across Middle East
  48. Why Americans are unhappier than ever – and how to fix it
  49. Recent stock market sell-off foreshadows a new Great Recession
  50. You're probably paying more for your car loan or mortgage than you should