NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Are Syrian refugees a danger to the West?

  • Written by Arie Kruglanski, Professor of Psychology, University of Maryland
A Syrian family loads their belongings as they evacuate an informal refugee camp in Deir Al-Ahmar, east Lebanon, June 9, 2019. AP/Hussein Malla

While today’s news is full of stories about refugees and migrants to the U.S. from Central America, the plight of those particular refugees is only part of an international migration crisis that has...

Read more: Are Syrian refugees a danger to the West?

What school segregation looks like in the US today, in 4 charts

  • Written by Erica Frankenberg, Professor of Education and Demography, Pennsylvania State University
Many kids in the U.S. today attend public schools composed mostly of students of the same race.Aksinia Abiagam/Shutterstock.com

Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris, a senator from California, has spoken about how she benefited from attending Berkeley’s desegregated schools.

“There was a little girl in California who was part...

Read more: What school segregation looks like in the US today, in 4 charts

Cartel kingpin El Chapo is jailed for life, but the US-Mexico drug trade is booming

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong
Kingpin no longer.AP Photo/Eduardo Verdugo, File

The infamous Mexican drug lord Joaquín Archivaldo Guzmán Loera – aka “El Chapo” – has been sentenced to life plus an additional 30 years for drug trafficking, conspiracy, money laundering and weapons charges, among other crimes committed over the past...

Read more: Cartel kingpin El Chapo is jailed for life, but the US-Mexico drug trade is booming

Adapting cities to a hotter world: 3 essential reads

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Environment + Energy Editor, The Conversation
Keeping cool in Brooklyn.A. Katz/Shutterstock

Heat waves can be deadly, especially when they combine high temperatures with elevated humidity levels that make the air feel even hotter. The impacts can be especially strong in cities, which often are several degrees warmer than nearby rural areas due to the urban heat island effect. These three...

Read more: Adapting cities to a hotter world: 3 essential reads

Heat stroke: A doctor offers tips to stay safe as temperatures soar

  • Written by Gabriel Neal, Clinical Assistant Professor of Family Medicine, Texas A&M University
Staying hydrated is key to avoiding heat stroke and other heat-related health problems.FocusStocker/Shutterstock.com

I easily remember laughing at Wile E. Coyote trying to catch the Road Runner while watching Saturday morning cartoons as a child. I can still see the Coyote walking slowly through the sweltering desert, sun high in the sky,...

Read more: Heat stroke: A doctor offers tips to stay safe as temperatures soar

Why the federal government isn't prosecuting the officer who choked Eric Garner

  • Written by Caren Morrison, Associate Professor of Law, Georgia State University
Gwen Carr, Eric Garner's mother, says the federal government should have filed charges.AP Photo/Bebeto Matthews

The Justice Department won’t file federal charges against the New York City police officer who put Eric Garner into the chokehold that led to his death. With the statute of limitations having run out, the case, legally, is closed.

The...

Read more: Why the federal government isn't prosecuting the officer who choked Eric Garner

Washington state's big bet on 'free college'

  • Written by William Zumeta, Professor of Public Policy and Governance and Professor of Education, University of Washington
Washington state has passed a measure to cover college tuition for students from low- and moderate-income families.VDB Photos/Shutterstock.com

Washington state doesn’t have a problem finding educated people to work in its booming high-tech economy – it’s just most of those people come from out of state.

This is why Washington...

Read more: Washington state's big bet on 'free college'

Better design could make mobile devices easier for seniors to use

  • Written by Edward Henry Steinfeld, SUNY Distinguished Professor of Architecture, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
If all of these devices really work together, they can be a bigger help than any one of them alone.Pro Image Content/Shutterstock.com

A loud “bing” sounded as we drove onto the highway access ramp. I didn’t see a message on our car’s screen. Was it my phone or my wife’s? Was it a calendar alert, or did one of us...

Read more: Better design could make mobile devices easier for seniors to use

The dysfunctional debt ceiling and why we should kill it: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Steven Pressman, Professor of Economics, Colorado State University
Treasury Secretary Mnuchin is taking 'extraordinary measures' to avoid busting the debt ceiling. AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

Editor’s note: The U.S. government maxed out its national credit card in March and has been moving money around ever since to avoid running out of cash. Very soon the Treasury Department will reach the limits of this...

Read more: The dysfunctional debt ceiling and why we should kill it: 5 questions answered

A giant leap for humankind -- future Moon missions will include diverse astronauts and more partners

  • Written by Sara M. Langston, Assistant Professor of Spaceflight Operations, Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
This second era of space exploration will include a diverse corp of astronauts.studiostoks/Shutterstock.com

As NASA celebrates the 50th anniversary of the historic Moon landing with a live TV broadcast and events, there is a focus on recognizing the contributions of the thousands of men and women who made the Apollo 11 mission possible. This year...

Read more: A giant leap for humankind -- future Moon missions will include diverse astronauts and more partners

More Articles ...

  1. Home birth may start babies off with health-promoting microbes
  2. How the Volkswagen Beetle sparked America's art car movement
  3. Justice Stevens, Babe Ruth and the best law clerk assignment ever
  4. Voices from an age of uncertain work – Americans miss stability and a shared sense of purpose in their jobs
  5. Trump wasn't the first president to confront the Supreme Court – and back down
  6. Robert Hooke: The 'English Leonardo' who was a 17th-century scientific superstar
  7. 5 things parents need to know about 'summer loss'
  8. Counting 11 million undocumented immigrants is easier than Trump thinks
  9. How immigrants give American companies a powerful boost against Chinese rivals
  10. Can protecting land promote employment? In New England, the answer is yes
  11. The Bible says to welcome refugees
  12. 3 myths to bust about breaking up 'big tech'
  13. Americans focus on responding to earthquake damage, not preventing it, because they're unaware of their risk
  14. Did we mishear Neil Armstrong's famous first words on the Moon?
  15. As flood risks increase across the US, it's time to recognize the limits of levees
  16. War's physical toll can last for generations, as it has for the children of the Vietnam War
  17. When migrants go home, they bring back money, skills and ideas that can change a country
  18. Young Americans deserve a 21st-century Moonshot to Mars
  19. What is the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty? Here's why it's still important
  20. Mapping the Moon for Apollo
  21. University of California's showdown with the biggest academic publisher aims to change scholarly publishing for good
  22. How do lithium-ion batteries work?
  23. The real midlife crisis confronting many Americans
  24. In divided Alaska, the choice is between paying for government or giving residents bigger oil wealth checks
  25. The ‘giant sucking sound’ of NAFTA: Ross Perot was ridiculed as alarmist in 1992 but his warning turned out to be prescient
  26. Trump's order for more action on kidney disease may shrink organ transplant waitlists
  27. Erdoğan's control over Turkey is ending – what comes next?
  28. Ticks spread plenty more for you to worry about beyond Lyme disease
  29. Could black philanthropy help solve the black student debt crisis?
  30. The Trump administration wants to dismantle the agency overseeing 2 million federal workers – and weaken safeguards against partisanship
  31. Long before Armstrong and Aldrin, artists were stoking dreams of space travel
  32. DNA testing companies offer telomere testing – but what does it tell you about aging and disease risk?
  33. How your diet contributes to nutrient pollution and dead zones in lakes and bays
  34. Commercial supersonic aircraft could return to the skies
  35. Why states and cities should stop handing out billions in economic incentives to companies
  36. How much is your data worth to tech companies? Lawmakers want to tell you, but it's not that easy to calculate
  37. How did people clean their teeth in the olden days?
  38. 'The Farewell' highlights tough conversations families face when confronted with death
  39. An invisible government agency produces crucial national security intelligence, but is anyone listening?
  40. Mexican president López Obrador has a woman problem
  41. Western states buy time with a 7-year Colorado River drought plan, but face a hotter, drier future
  42. At least 2% of US public water systems are like Flint's – Americans just don't hear about them
  43. Selecting groceries ahead of time helps some shoppers make healthier choices
  44. 4 questions answered on sex trafficking in the US
  45. The long, bipartisan history of dealing with immigrants harshly
  46. The forgotten history of segregated swimming pools and amusement parks
  47. A booming international movie market is transforming Hollywood
  48. Neuroscience and artificial intelligence can help improve each other
  49. Women are less supportive of space exploration – getting a woman on the Moon might change that
  50. How Congress lost power over trade deals – and why some lawmakers want it back