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Trump's path to citizenship for 1.8 million will leave out nearly half of all Dreamers

  • Written by Kevin Johnson, Dean and Professor of Public Interest Law and Chicana/o Studies, University of California, Davis
Anxiously awaiting the State of the UnionAP Photo/Susan Walsh

Which “Dreamers” will be given legal recourse to stay in the U.S., and which ones will be left out?

This is the central question surrounding current debate in Washington over a group of undocumented immigrants who were brought to the U.S. as children. The scramble for a...

Read more: Trump's path to citizenship for 1.8 million will leave out nearly half of all Dreamers

Can scientists learn to make 'nature forecasts' just as we forecast the weather?

  • Written by Michael Dietze, Associate Professor of Earth and Environment, Boston University
Images created by NASA with satellite data helped the U.S. Department of Agriculture analyze outbreak patterns for southern pine beetles in Alabama, in spring 2016.NASA

Imagine that spring has finally arrived and you’re planning your weekend. The weather forecast looks great. You could go to the beach – but what if it’s closed...

Read more: Can scientists learn to make 'nature forecasts' just as we forecast the weather?

Talent doesn't explain the success of the Patriots and Eagles

  • Written by Kyle Emich, Assistant Professor of Management, University of Delaware
Patriots head coach Bill Belichick talks to players during a game against the New Orleans Saints on Sept. 17, 2017.AP Photo/Butch Dill

The New England Patriots lost their best wide receiver to an ACL tear before the season started. Two months later, Patriots defensive captain and Pro Bowl linebacker Dont'a Hightower tore his pectoral muscle, ending...

Read more: Talent doesn't explain the success of the Patriots and Eagles

California's other drought: A major earthquake is overdue

  • Written by Richard Aster, Professor of Geophysics, Colorado State University
Fires break out across San Francisco after the April 18, 1906 earthquake.USGS

California earthquakes are a geologic inevitability. The state straddles the North American and Pacific tectonic plates and is crisscrossed by the San Andreas and other active fault systems. The magnitude 7.9 earthquake that struck off Alaska’s Kodiak Island on Jan....

Read more: California's other drought: A major earthquake is overdue

The art of the public apology

  • Written by Ashraf Rushdy, Benjamin Waite Professor of the English Language, Wesleyan University
What does it mean when public figures say sorry?AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Just prior to his sentencing, former USA Gymnastics physician Larry Nassar formally apologized to the more than 160 women whom he’d sexually abused. He joins a growing list. Over the past few months, many public personalitiesaccused of sexual assaulthave apologized in...

Read more: The art of the public apology

The hidden history of black nationalist women's political activism

  • Written by Keisha N. Blain, Assistant Professor of History, University of Pittsburgh
Amy Jacques Garvey with her husband, Marcus

Black History Month is an opportunity to reflect on the historical contributions of black people in the United States. Too often, however, this history focuses on black men, sidelining black women and diminishing their contributions.

This is true in mainstream narratives of black nationalist movements in...

Read more: The hidden history of black nationalist women's political activism

Nassar's abuse reflects more than 50 years of men's power over female athletes

  • Written by Anne Blaschke, Visiting Assistant Professor of History, College of the Holy Cross

“You’ve got a lucky boyfriend.” These were the words the physician’s assistant conducting my gynecological exam in 1998 uttered as he suggestively smiled down at me over my paper gown. I lay on the exam table, 20 years old, wondering what to say back. Feeling angry, embarrassed and violated, I called my mom afterward. We...

Read more: Nassar's abuse reflects more than 50 years of men's power over female athletes

Here's how workers would spend the corporate tax cut – if they had a voice

  • Written by Thomas Kochan, Professor of Management, MIT Sloan School of Management
Having a bullhorn is nice, but workers need more to elevate their voices.AP Photo/David Goldman)

Over 200 CEOs have said they will raise wages or give bonuses as a result of the large corporate income tax cut passed late last year by Congress.

Some view their plans as simply a public relations move, others as a response to tighter labor markets or...

Read more: Here's how workers would spend the corporate tax cut – if they had a voice

Promising male birth control pill has its origin in an arrow poison

  • Written by Gunda Georg, Professor of Medicinal Chemistry and Director of the Institute for Therapeutics Discovery and Development, University of Minnesota
Will blue packets replace pink ones soon?Aleksandra Berzhets/Shutterstock.com

After decades of research, development of a male birth control may now be one step closer. My colleagues and I are working on a promising lead for a male birth control pill based on ouabain – a plant extract that African warriors and hunters traditionally used as a...

Read more: Promising male birth control pill has its origin in an arrow poison

Why ignoring mental health needs of young Syrian refugees could harm us all

  • Written by M. Zaher Sahloul, Associate Clinical Professor, University of Illinois at Chicago
A Syrian child drew a picture of helicopters dropping bombs and children dying as a result. The surviving children are crying, while the deceased ones have smiles on their faces. Zaher Sahloud, CC BY-SA

When a seven-year-old student in eastern Aleppo was asked at the peak of the bombardment campaign by the Assad regime in 2015 to draw a picture, he...

Read more: Why ignoring mental health needs of young Syrian refugees could harm us all

More Articles ...

  1. Why it's too soon for Davos billionaires to toast Trump's 'pro-business' policies
  2. Presidential corruption verdict shows just how flawed Brazil's justice system is
  3. Trump's travel ban is just one of many US policies that legalize discrimination against Muslims
  4. Millions of refugees could benefit from big data – but we're not using it
  5. What happened at Davos? 8 essential reads
  6. How should we decide what to do?
  7. Why don't STEM majors vote as much as others?
  8. Corporate sponsors of Olympians enter the #MeToo fray
  9. Artificial intelligence is the weapon of the next Cold War
  10. Violent past, digital future: Angela Merkel's remarks at Davos
  11. Macron calls for a 'global contract' at Davos
  12. Davos grapples with inequality
  13. What Trump’s every-country-for-itself rhetoric gets wrong about Davos
  14. 3 strategies today's activist women share with their foremothers
  15. Inside North Korea's literary fiction factory
  16. Does America have a caste system?
  17. Can mirrors boost solar panel output - and help overcome Trump's tariffs?
  18. The comeback and dangers of the drug GHB
  19. Treasury Secretary Mnuchin's weak-dollar myopia is dangerous
  20. Macron's pledge to wipe out coal is just as meaningless as Trump's plan to revive it
  21. Fossil jawbone from Israel is the oldest modern human found outside Africa
  22. Why climate change is worsening public health problems
  23. The state of the US solar industry: 5 questions answered
  24. For a North Korean refugee raising her kids in the UK, the past is never far
  25. I visited the Rohingya refugee camps and here is what Bangladesh is doing right
  26. How secure is your data when it's stored in the cloud?
  27. The hidden health inequalities that American Indians and Alaskan Natives face
  28. The world on a billionaire's budget
  29. Don't automate the fun out of life
  30. Look up at the super blue blood full moon Jan. 31 – here's what you'll see and why
  31. 4 things you need to know right now to protect yourself from the flu
  32. How talented kids from low-income families become America's 'Lost Einsteins'
  33. DACA isn't just about social justice – legalizing Dreamers makes economic sense too
  34. Successful businesses need proactive leadership – and so does Congress
  35. Is it time for a 21st-century version of 'The Day After'?
  36. Is a unified Korea possible?
  37. Unrest in Iran will continue until religious rule ends
  38. Spanish use is steady or dropping in US despite high Latino immigration
  39. When it comes to your health, where you live matters
  40. Medicaid work requirements could cost the government more in the long run
  41. Another continuing resolution won't solve the real problem within the Republican Party
  42. Healthy to eat, unhealthy to grow: Strawberries embody the contradictions of California agriculture
  43. There are better ways to foster solar innovation and save jobs than Trump's tariffs
  44. Is attraction to an age group another kind of sexual orientation?
  45. What are chronophilias?
  46. What might explain the unhappiness epidemic?
  47. Guarding against the possible Spectre in every machine
  48. Secret memo shows bipartisanship during Watergate succession crisis
  49. Deportees in Mexico tell of disrupted lives, families and communities
  50. Trump goes to Davos: 4 books he should read on first trip to gathering of global elites