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Climate scientists may not be the best communicators of climate threats

  • Written by Risa Palm, Professor of Urban Studies and Public Health, Georgia State University
Climate scientist James Hansen, who has spoken out about the dangers of climate change, was arrested in 2010 alongside Appalachian residents.Rich Clement/flickr

The American public ranks scientists as some of the most trusted voices in the country. So it made sense for eminent climate scientists, such as James Hansen, Michael Mann, and Peter...

Read more: Climate scientists may not be the best communicators of climate threats

Mexican women are angry about rape, murder and government neglect – and they want the world to know

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong

Wearing green bandannas and dousing police in pink glitter, Mexican women on Aug. 16 staged a furious protest in Mexico City after a 17-year-old girl reported being raped by four police officers earlier in the month.

Officials have sent mixed signals about ongoing investigations of the case, and Mexico City Mayor Claudia Sheinbaum triggered fury...

Read more: Mexican women are angry about rape, murder and government neglect – and they want the world to know

What is Haitian Voodoo?

  • Written by Guilberly Louissaint, Anthropology Ph.D. Student, University of California, Irvine
Voodoo believers walk during the annual Voodoo festival Fete Gede at Cite Soleil Cemetery in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.AP Photo/Dieu Nalio Chery

For many in the West, Voodoo invokes images of animal sacrifices, magical dolls and chanted spells.

But Voodoo – as practiced in Haiti and by the black diaspora in the United States, South America and...

Read more: What is Haitian Voodoo?

When does trash talking work?

  • Written by Karen C.P. McDermott, Researcher in Communication, University of Connecticut
Boxers Floyd Mayweather Jr. and Conor McGregor engage in some verbal sparring prior to their 2017 bout.AP Photo/John Locher

The Abstract features interesting research and the people behind it.


Karen C.P. McDermott recently completed a study on trash talk, the taunts or boasts meant to intimidate or distract an opponent.

Her study was one of the...

Read more: When does trash talking work?

College rankings might as well be student rankings

  • Written by Jonathan Wai, Assistant Professor of Education Policy and Psychology and Endowed Chair, University of Arkansas
College rankings often take student caliber into account, an analysis shows.vectorfusionart/Shutterstock.com

Each year various magazines and newspapers publish college rankings in an attempt to inform parents and prospective students which colleges are supposedly the best.

U.S. News & World Report’s “Best Colleges” –...

Read more: College rankings might as well be student rankings

Trump administration revives public charge clause that kept Nazi-era refugees from the US

  • Written by Laurel Leff, Associate Professor of Journalism, Northeastern University
“Give me your tired and your poor who can stand on their own two feet. And who will not become a public charge," said Acting head of Citizenship and Immigration Services Ken Cuccinelli.AP Photo/Seth Wenig

During the Nazi era, roughly 300,000 additional Jewish refugees could have gained entry to the U.S. without exceeding the nation’s...

Read more: Trump administration revives public charge clause that kept Nazi-era refugees from the US

The misguided attacks on 'This Land Is Your Land'

  • Written by Will Kaufman, Professor of American Literature and Culture, University of Central Lancashire
Some of Guthrie's greatest champions have had difficulties with the song.Al Aumuller/Library of Congress

In recent years, Woody Guthrie’s “This Land Is Your Land” has become a rallying cry for immigrants. And in July, after President Donald Trump tweeted that four Democratic congresswomen of color needed to “go back where...

Read more: The misguided attacks on 'This Land Is Your Land'

How two Islamic groups fell from power to persecution: Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Turkey's Gulenists

  • Written by Ahmet T. Kuru, Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University

Mohammed Morsi, Egypt’s first-ever democratically elected president, died unexpectedly during a trial in June 2019. He was a member of the Muslim Brotherhood, an almost century-old Islamist group that rose to power after the Egyptian Revolution of 2011.

Its political tenure was short. Morsi was deposed by a coup in 2013, on the one-year...

Read more: How two Islamic groups fell from power to persecution: Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood and Turkey's...

What states that don't protect LGBTQ workers from discrimination have in common

  • Written by Tesa Rigel Hines, Clinical Instructor, American Politics and Public Policy, Purdue University Northwest
Some states protect LGBTQ worker from discrimination, but many others do not.Rachaphak/Shutterstock.com

Are you fully protected from employment discrimination?

For employees who identify as LGBTQ, and work in one of at least 17 states nationwide that fail to protect workers, the answer at best is uncertain. At worst, it’s “no”...

Read more: What states that don't protect LGBTQ workers from discrimination have in common

Students who plan to seek more education than needed for their career earn more money

  • Written by Soobin Kim, Post-doctoral Research Fellow, Michigan State University
Extra education has been shown to pay off in the long run.John O'Boyle/Flickr

When it comes to career success, it pays to aim for more education than what you need for the job you want.

That is the key finding of a new study that I and several colleagues did by analyzing the salaries of high school students who expected to get more education than...

Read more: Students who plan to seek more education than needed for their career earn more money

More Articles ...

  1. Guatemala: Corrupción, inseguridad son los primeros retos para el próximo presidente
  2. Guatemala: Corrupción e inseguridad son los primeros retos del próximo presidente
  3. Cómo enseñar mejor a nuestros hijos en la era del big data
  4. Stem cells could regenerate organs – but only if the body won't reject them
  5. Ocean warming has fisheries on the move, helping some but hurting more
  6. Bring on the technology bans!
  7. 5 tips for college students to avoid burnout
  8. Before Trump eyed Greenland: Here’s what happened last time the US bought a large chunk of the Arctic
  9. Who is responsible when an inmate commits suicide?
  10. Who is responsible when an inmate dies by suicide?
  11. Too many people think satirical news is real
  12. Free college proposals should include private colleges
  13. A cyberattack could wreak destruction comparable to a nuclear weapon
  14. How Democrats can win back workers in 2020
  15. Why are people still dying from Legionnaires' disease?
  16. 'Christian left' is reviving in America, appalled by treatment of migrants
  17. Organic food health benefits have been hard to assess, but that could change
  18. What's behind the protests in Kashmir?
  19. Why building community – even through discomfort – could help stressed college students
  20. Shouldn’t there be a law against reckless opioid sales? Turns out, there is
  21. What's the right way for scientists to edit human genes? 5 essential reads
  22. Why are so many languages spoken in some places and so few in others?
  23. A brief astronomical history of Saturn's amazing rings
  24. Fifty years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation
  25. 50 years ago, Jimi Hendrix's Woodstock anthem expressed the hopes and fears of a nation
  26. One budget line Congress can agree on: Spending billions on the US military
  27. Huge wildfires in the Arctic and far North send a planetary warning
  28. Mexico wants to run a tourist train through its Mayan heartland — should it?
  29. Surprising volunteers with awards is one way to keep them on board
  30. We use satellites to measure water scarcity
  31. Want better sleep? Try a warm bath or shower 1-2 hours before bedtime, study suggests
  32. New laws give victims more time to report rape or sexual assault – even Jeffrey Epstein's
  33. Saving endangered species: 5 essential reads
  34. Restoring soil can help address climate change
  35. Guatemala's next president has few plans for fixing rampant corruption, crime and injustice
  36. I'm one of hundreds of archaeologists exiled from Syria who's mourning what the war is costing us
  37. A neuroscience-based action plan to deal with stress after El Paso and Dayton shootings
  38. Making money off of politics isn't new – it was business as usual in the Gilded Age
  39. The journalist who exposed the Jeffrey Epsteins of Victorian London
  40. New climate change report underscores the need to manage land for the short and long term
  41. Why the 2020 census matters for rural Americans
  42. Talking about Charlottesville with alt-right students
  43. Remote control for brain cells: scientists use ultrasound waves to activate neurons
  44. The new field of sonogenetics uses sound waves to control the behavior of brain cells
  45. Companies promoting causes can be accused of 'wokewashing' – allying themselves only for good PR
  46. Curious Kids: Is homework worthwhile?
  47. Saudi women are fighting for their freedom – and their hard-won victories are growing
  48. Americans’ support for immigration is at record highs – but the government is out of sync with their views
  49. Can experts determine who might be a mass killer? 3 questions answered
  50. I traveled to American Samoa 5 times to study the secret to its football success