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5 ways the world is better off dealing with a pandemic now than in 1918

  • Written by Siddharth Chandra, Professor, James Madison College and Director, Asian Studies Center, Michigan State University
imageEmergency hospital during influenza epidemic at Camp Funston in Kansas around 1918. National Museum of Health and Medicine

Near the end of the First World War, a deadly flu raced across the globe. The influenza pandemic became the most severe pandemic in recent history, infecting about one-third of the world’s population between 1918 and 1920...

Read more: 5 ways the world is better off dealing with a pandemic now than in 1918

Holding on and holding still, a son photographs his father with Alzheimer's

  • Written by Nick Lehr, Arts + Culture Editor
image'With Dad,' Marlborough, Massachusetts, Oct. 29, 1998.Stephen DiRado, Author provided

In 1985, when Stephen DiRado was just a few years out of college, he bought his first large-format, 8x10 camera. Since each exposure cost eight bucks in today’s dollars, the process required contemplation; he couldn’t simply snap 100 images and pick...

Read more: Holding on and holding still, a son photographs his father with Alzheimer's

Python skin jackets and elephant leather boots: How wealthy Western nations help drive the global wildlife trade

  • Written by Maria Ivanova, Associate Professor of Global Governance and Director, Center for Governance and Sustainability, John W. McCormack Graduate School of Policy and Global Studies, University of Massachusetts Boston
imageProtesters hold signs outside women's fashion designer Eudon Choi in London during Fashion Week in 2017.Elena Rostenova/www.shutterstock.com

Three-quarters of new and emerging infectious diseases in humans originate in wildlife. COVID-19, SARS and Ebola all started this way. The COVID-19 global pandemic has drawn new attention to how people think...

Read more: Python skin jackets and elephant leather boots: How wealthy Western nations help drive the global...

We caught bacteria from the most pristine air on earth to help solve a climate modeling mystery

  • Written by Kathryn Moore, PhD student in Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University
imageNot all clouds are the same, and climate models have been predicting the wrong kinds of clouds over the Southern Ocean. Kathryn Moore, CC BY-ND

The Southern Ocean is a vast band of open water that encircles the entire planet between Antarctica and the Southern Hemisphere landmasses. It is the cloudiest place on Earth, and the amount of sunlight...

Read more: We caught bacteria from the most pristine air on earth to help solve a climate modeling mystery

National survey shows that social service nonprofits are trying to help more people on smaller budgets as the coronavirus pandemic and economic downturn unfold

  • Written by Mirae Kim, Assistant Professor of Public Administration, Georgia State University
imageVolunteers distributing food in Valley Stream, New York.AP Photo/Mary Altaffer

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

The big idea

A recent national survey we conducted shows that social service nonprofits are estimating on average that over the next six months, their revenue will decline by between 19.3% and 37.3%.

They...

Read more: National survey shows that social service nonprofits are trying to help more people on smaller...

Supreme Court ruling on Dreamers sends a clear message to the White House: You have to tell the truth

  • Written by Morgan Marietta, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Massachusetts Lowell
imageProtesters celebrate the Supreme Court ruling.AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

When it came down to it, the fate of 700,000 immigrants brought to U.S. as children hung on a simple question: Does the White House have to tell the whole truth in justifying its move to deport them?

On June 18, the Supreme Court said “yes.”

In a 5-to-4 decision that...

Read more: Supreme Court ruling on Dreamers sends a clear message to the White House: You have to tell the...

Domestic abusers use tech that connects as a weapon during coronavirus lockdowns

  • Written by Alison J. Marganski, Associate Professor & Director of Criminology, Le Moyne College
imageTechnology plays a major role in violence against women and girls.AntonioGuillem/iStock via Getty Images

The coronavirus pandemic has driven much of daily life – work, school, socializing – online. Unfortunately, perpetrators of violence against women and girls are also increasingly turning to technology in response to the pandemic.

Globa...

Read more: Domestic abusers use tech that connects as a weapon during coronavirus lockdowns

What do struggling small businesses need most? Time – and bankruptcy can provide it

  • Written by Brook Gotberg, Associate Professor of Law, University of Missouri-Columbia
imageFor some small businesses, temporary will become permanent.AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

The coronavirus pandemic and lockdown forced nearly a third of all small businesses in the United States to close. Some have shut down for good – one estimate puts the percentage at almost 2%, or over 100,000 so far.

Those that remain and are gradually...

Read more: What do struggling small businesses need most? Time – and bankruptcy can provide it

Living near active oil and gas wells in California tied to low birth weight and smaller babies

  • Written by Rachel Morello-Frosch, Professor, Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management & School of Public Health, University of California, Berkeley
imageA pump jack in the town of Signal Hill, California, which sits within the Long Beach Oil Field near the Port of Long Beach. Frederick J. Brown/AFP via Getty Images

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

The big idea

In a California study, we found that pregnant women living near active high-production oil and gas wells...

Read more: Living near active oil and gas wells in California tied to low birth weight and smaller babies

Land loss has plagued black America since emancipation – is it time to look again at 'black commons' and collective ownership?

  • Written by Julian Agyeman, Professor of Urban and Environmental Policy and Planning, Tufts University
imageFormer slaves harvesting for their own profit.Corbis via Getty Images

Underlying the recent unrest sweeping U.S. cities over police brutality is a fundamental inequity in wealth, land and power that has circumscribed black lives since the end of slavery in the U.S.

The “40 acres and a mule” promised to formerly enslaved Africans never...

Read more: Land loss has plagued black America since emancipation – is it time to look again at 'black...

More Articles ...

  1. 5 reasons police officers should have college degrees
  2. The Supreme Court decision to grant protections to LGBT workers is an important expansion of the Civil Rights Act
  3. Conservation could create jobs post-pandemic
  4. What is the 'zero gravity' that people experience in the vomit comet or space flight?
  5. Here's why some people are willing to challenge bullying, corruption and bad behavior, even at personal risk
  6. Tracing homophobia in South Korea's coronavirus surveillance program
  7. Rural America is more vulnerable to COVID-19 than cities are, and it's starting to show
  8. Dead white men get their say in court as Virginia tries to remove Robert E. Lee statues
  9. Can you visit your dad safely on Father's Day? A doctor gives you a checklist
  10. How Hemingway felt about fatherhood
  11. Black Americans, crucial workers in crises, emerge worse off – not better
  12. Quarantine bubbles – when done right – limit coronavirus risk and help fight loneliness
  13. Supreme Court to decide the future of the Electoral College
  14. Pandemic, privacy rules add to worries over 2020 census accuracy
  15. Can Asia end its uncontrolled consumption of wildlife? Here's how North America did it a century ago
  16. I study coronavirus in a highly secured biosafety lab – here's why I feel safer here than in the world outside
  17. How 'vaccine nationalism' could block vulnerable populations' access to COVID-19 vaccines
  18. How the coronavirus escapes an evolutionary trade-off that helps keep other pathogens in check
  19. Black religious leaders are up front and central in US protests – as they have been for the last 200 years
  20. What the Supreme Court's decision on LGBT employment discrimination will mean for transgender Americans
  21. US giving reached a near-record $450 billion in 2019 as the role of foundations kept up gradual growth
  22. Supreme Court expands workplace equality to LGBTQ employees, but questions remain
  23. How doctors' fears of getting COVID-19 can mean losing the healing power of touch: One physician's story
  24. Nondiscrimination against LGBT individuals isn't just the law – it helps organizations succeed
  25. Ready to see your doctor but scared to go? Here are some guidelines
  26. People are getting sick from coronavirus spreading through the air – and that's a big challenge for reopening
  27. Why are sitcom dads still so inept?
  28. Herd immunity won’t solve our COVID-19 problem
  29. 'Normal' human body temperature is a range around 98.6 F – a physiologist explains why
  30. Meteorites from Mars contain clues about the red planet's geology
  31. 'Telepresence' can help bring advanced courses to schools that don't offer them
  32. 3 lessons from how schools responded to the 1918 pandemic worth heeding today
  33. COVID-19 will turn the state pension problem into a fiscal crisis
  34. What Buddhism and science can teach each other – and us – about the universe
  35. A pragmatist philosopher's view of the US response to the coronavirus pandemic
  36. Uruguay quietly beats coronavirus, distinguishing itself from its South American neighbors – yet again
  37. Are we all OCD now, with obsessive hand-washing and technology addiction?
  38. India's goddesses of contagion provide protection in the pandemic – just don't make them angry
  39. Coronavirus shows how ageism is harmful to health of older adults
  40. No justice, no peace: Why Catholic priests are kneeling with George Floyd protesters
  41. Being convicted of a crime has thousands of consequences besides incarceration – and some last a lifetime
  42. Why hairdressers, gyms and the Trump campaign are asking people to sign COVID-19 waivers
  43. What the archaeological record reveals about epidemics throughout history – and the human response to them
  44. Was the coronavirus outbreak an intelligence failure?
  45. What is a derecho? An atmospheric scientist explains these rare but dangerous storm systems
  46. Police unions are one of the biggest obstacles to transforming policing
  47. Video: How simple math can help predict the melting of sea ice
  48. Why stocks are soaring even as coronavirus cases surge, at least 20 million remain unemployed and the US sinks into recession
  49. Churchgoers aren't able to lift every voice and sing during the pandemic – here's why that matters
  50. A short history of black women and police violence