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From ‘40 acres and a mule’ to LBJ to the 2020 election, a brief history of slavery reparation promises

  • Written by John Torpey, Presidential Professor of Sociology and History, Graduate Center, City University of New York
Several 2020 presidential candidates have called for reparations for slavery in the U.S.AP Photo/Douglas Healey

Does the United States owe descendants of slaves reparations?

It’s a question being asked more frequently of Democrats running for the 2020 presidential nomination. Many have expressedvarying degrees of support for reparations,...

Read more: From ‘40 acres and a mule’ to LBJ to the 2020 election, a brief history of slavery reparation...

Measles outbreaks show legal challenges of balancing personal rights and public good

  • Written by Katherine Drabiak, Assistant Professor, University of South Florida
Signs in Rockland County, New York telling people about free vaccines in an effort to curb the measles outbreak there. Seth Wenig/AP Photo

The measles outbreaks continue to spread, with New York City declaring a public health emergency and requiring people in four ZIP codes to have their children vaccinated or face penalties, including a fine of...

Read more: Measles outbreaks show legal challenges of balancing personal rights and public good

Brexit is a rejection of the Good Friday Agreement for peace in Northern Ireland

  • Written by Kimberly Cowell-Meyers, Assistant Professor, Department of Government, American University School of Public Affairs
Signs of protest along the Irish border. AP Photo/Peter Morrison

The European Union has offered U.K. lawmakers more time to agree on a Brexit plan. Why is the extension needed?

Theresa May’s plan to exit the European Union has failed to pass the British Parliament three times. Some have blamed party disunity or May’s mishandling of...

Read more: Brexit is a rejection of the Good Friday Agreement for peace in Northern Ireland

A thousand years ago, the Catholic Church paid little attention to homosexuality

  • Written by Lisa McClain, Professor of History and Gender Studies, Boise State University

Pope Francis has spoken openly about homosexuality. In a recent interview, the pope said that homosexual tendencies “are not a sin.” And a few years ago, in comments made during an in-flight interview, he said,

“If someone is gay and he searches for the Lord and has good will, who am I to judge?”

However, the pope has also...

Read more: A thousand years ago, the Catholic Church paid little attention to homosexuality

When people downsize to tiny houses, they adopt more environmentally friendly lifestyles

  • Written by Maria Saxton, Ph.D. Candidate in Environmental Planning and Design, Virginia Tech
Tiny houses on display in Portland, Oregon in 2017.Dan David Cook/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

Interest is surging in tiny homes – livable dwelling units that typically measure under 400 square feet. Much of this interest is driven by media coverage that claims that living in tiny homes is good for the planet.

It may seem intuitively obvious that...

Read more: When people downsize to tiny houses, they adopt more environmentally friendly lifestyles

How a 'missing' movement made gun control a winning issue

  • Written by Aimee Huff, Assistant Professor, Marketing, Oregon State University
House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler shakes hands with Aalayah Eastmond, a senior at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, during a hearing on guns violence at Capitol Hill on Feb. 6, 2019. AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana

Thirty-three Republicans and all but one Democrat in the U.S. House of Representatives agreed to...

Read more: How a 'missing' movement made gun control a winning issue

Michelle Obama is a surprise textbook example of how women thrive and grow through adulthood

  • Written by Ruthellen Josselson, Professor of Psychology, Fielding Graduate University
Michelle Obama charted her own course, prioritizing what she values.AP Photo/Pablo Martinez MonsivaisThe individual story told in the former first lady’s bestselling memoir is emblematic of the best-case version of women’s development and fulfillment.Penguin Random House

Michelle Obama’s “Becoming” can be read in many...

Read more: Michelle Obama is a surprise textbook example of how women thrive and grow through adulthood

Data show how American mothers balance work and family

  • Written by Alexandra Killewald, Professor of Sociology, Harvard University
Many American mothers say part-time work would be ideal. Halfpoint/shutterstock.com

Almost 70% of American mothers with children under 18 work for pay.

But motherhood remains disruptive for many women’s work lives. American women earn almost 20% less per hour than their male peers, in part because women disproportionately take responsibility...

Read more: Data show how American mothers balance work and family

8 things you may not know about Leonardo da Vinci, on the 500th anniversary of his death

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
Larger than life even 500 years ago, Leonardo's legend has grown over the centuries.Hunter Bliss Images/Shutterstock.com

This year marks the 500th anniversary of Leonardo da Vinci’s death. Widely considered one of the greatest polymaths in human history, Leonardo was an inventor, artist, musician, architect, engineer, anatomist, botanist,...

Read more: 8 things you may not know about Leonardo da Vinci, on the 500th anniversary of his death

74 screens of legalese don't protect your data – here's a blueprint for new laws that could make a difference

  • Written by Fred H. Cate, Distinguished Professor and C. Ben Dutton Professor of Law, Indiana University
Companies and governments have massive amounts of data about many people.Lightspring/Shutterstock.com

All over the world, government officials are trying to figure out how to craft laws and regulations about privacy – especially for digital data and online activity. The European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation took effect in...

Read more: 74 screens of legalese don't protect your data – here's a blueprint for new laws that could make a...

More Articles ...

  1. The generals who challenged Netanyahu ran a campaign largely devoid of substance
  2. Empathy is the secret ingredient that makes cooperation – and civilization – possible
  3. A country can never be too rich, too beautiful or too full of people
  4. How a 'hard' Brexit would harm US banks, carmakers and drug companies
  5. A defeat on offshore drilling extends the Trump administration's losing streak in court
  6. Fox News isn’t the problem, it’s the media’s obsession with Fox News
  7. Campus free speech laws being enacted in many states, but some may do more harm than good
  8. The pitfalls of the narcissistic NBA player
  9. Why Americans appear more likely to support Christian refugees
  10. What makes the Impossible Burger look and taste like real beef?
  11. Why it's hard to remove, or even diagnose, mentally ill or unstable presidents
  12. Migrants' stories: Why they flee
  13. Does legalizing marijuana help or harm Americans? Weighing the statistical evidence
  14. An analysis of nearly 4 million pitches shows just how many mistakes umpires make
  15. For the 'political-infotainment-media complex,' the Mueller investigation was a gold mine
  16. The replication crisis is good for science
  17. Don't blame Sharia for Islamic extremism -- blame colonialism
  18. Catholic missionaries are evangelizing on college campuses and trying to bring back the 'nones'
  19. Too many airplane systems rely on too few sensors
  20. In the name of 'amateurism,' college athletes make money for everyone except themselves
  21. Nixon and Reagan tried closing the border to pressure Mexico – here's what happened
  22. Climate research needs to change to help communities plan for the future
  23. Putin's plagiarism, fake Ukrainian degrees and other tales of world leaders accused of academic fraud
  24. It can take a village to feed hungry kids in schools
  25. Female astronauts: How performance products like space suits and bras are designed to pave the way for women's accomplishments
  26. An industrialized global food supply chain threatens human health – here's how to improve it
  27. Artificial intelligence can now emulate human behaviors – soon it will be dangerously good
  28. Congressional oversight is at the heart of America's democracy
  29. What parents should do to help students prepare for the first year of college
  30. Pet owners want to be masters, not servants – which is why we value dogs more than cats
  31. Calcium-munching bacteria could be a secret weapon against road salt eating away at concrete roads and bridges
  32. How unjust social structures help some but harm others
  33. Venezuela's power struggle reaches a tense stalemate, as human suffering deepens
  34. Voter ID laws don't seem to suppress minority votes – despite what many claim
  35. What causes greed and how can we deal with it?
  36. Want to understand accented speakers better? Practice, practice, practice
  37. Using computers to crack open centuries-old mathematical puzzles
  38. Genes and genealogy and making the most of famous relations
  39. As climate change erodes US coastlines, an invasive plant could become an ally
  40. The Trump administration's attempts to defund the Special Olympics, explained
  41. Pollen is getting worse, but you can make things better with these tips from an allergist
  42. What your pet's microchip has to do with the Mark of the Beast
  43. How Twitter and other social media can draw the US into foreign interventions
  44. New York gets serious about traffic with the first citywide US congestion pricing plan
  45. 3 times political conflict reshaped American mathematics
  46. Laws are chipping away at democracy around the world
  47. Kids exposed to flame retardant PBDE are at risk for lifelong liver or cardiovascular problems
  48. Did a censored female writer inspire Hemingway's famous style?
  49. So you want to tax the rich – here's which candidate's plan makes the most sense
  50. Brain scan evidence in criminal sentencing: A blessing and a curse