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How the EPA administrator protects public health, air, water and the environment

  • Written by Stan Meiburg, Executive Director, Sabin Center for Environment and Sustainability, Wake Forest University
imageAn EPA-sponsored cleanup of toxic waste from the Gowanus Canal, a Superfund site in Brooklyn, N.Y., in 2016.Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

From the time you get up in the morning until you go to bed at night, and even while you are asleep, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency affects your life. The air you breathe, the water you...

Read more: How the EPA administrator protects public health, air, water and the environment

With more Americans able to access legalized marijuana, fewer are picking up prescriptions for anti-anxiety medications – new research

  • Written by Ashley Bradford, Assistant Professor of Public Policy, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageNew research suggests that in some states, medicinal cannabis use could be leading to a reduction in the use of anxiety medications.Olena Ruban/Moment via Getty Images

In states where both medical and recreational marijuana are legal, fewer patients are filling prescriptions for medications used to treat anxiety. That is the key finding of my...

Read more: With more Americans able to access legalized marijuana, fewer are picking up prescriptions for...

Even 1 drink a day elevates your cancer risk – an expert on how alcohol affects the body breaks down a new government report

  • Written by Nikki Crowley, Assistant Professor of Biology, Biomedical Engineering and Pharmacology, Penn State
imageThe Surgeon General's report links alcohol to 100,000 cancer cases every year.Lord Henri Voton/E+ via Getty Images

Many people use the new year to reflect on their relationship with alcohol. Just-released government guidelines are giving Americans another reason to consider a “dry January.”

Over the past few decades, mounting scientific...

Read more: Even 1 drink a day elevates your cancer risk – an expert on how alcohol affects the body breaks...

Funding public schools based on enrollment in the previous year may help keep their budgets more stable, research shows

  • Written by Angie Nga Le, Postdoctoral Associate in Public Policy and Public Finance, Rutgers University
imageArizona public school teachers have been fighting for more funding for schools. AP Photo/Ross D. Franklin

Funding for public K-12 schools in the U.S. is based on enrollment. More students mean more money. In 31 states, public schools use the previous year’s enrollment numbers to determine the current year’s funding, which makes it...

Read more: Funding public schools based on enrollment in the previous year may help keep their budgets more...

Many ‘impact investors’ aren’t fully tracking whether their investments are good for society or the environment − new research

  • Written by Lauren Kaufmann, Assistant Professor of Business Administration, University of Virginia
imageEstablishing a lofty goal doesn't guarantee its accomplishment.VectorMine/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Investors can aim not only to make money but to benefit society while doing so. But few of those impact investors follow up on whether their strategy is having a positive impact, we found in a study published in the Journal of Business Ethics.

Imp...

Read more: Many ‘impact investors’ aren’t fully tracking whether their investments are good for society or...

From anecdotes to AI tools, how doctors make medical decisions is evolving with technology

  • Written by Aaron J. Masino, Associate Professor of Computing, Clemson University
imageAI tools can help doctors synthesize all the information that goes into a clinical decision.Khanchit Khirisutchalual/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The practice of medicine has undergone an incredible, albeit incomplete, transformation over the past 50 years, moving steadily from a field informed primarily by expert opinion and the anecdotal...

Read more: From anecdotes to AI tools, how doctors make medical decisions is evolving with technology

Southern California is extremely dry, and that’s fueling fires − maps show just how dry

  • Written by Ming Pan, Senior Research Hydrologist, University of California, San Diego
imageDry vegetation helped fuel fires that spread through the Los Angeles area in early January 2025.Mario Tama/Getty Images

Dry conditions across Southern California set the stage for a series of deadly wind-driven wildfires that burned thousands of homes and other structures in the Los Angeles area in early January 2025.

Ming Pan, a hydrologist at the...

Read more: Southern California is extremely dry, and that’s fueling fires − maps show just how dry

Trump gets an ‘unconditional discharge’ in hush money conviction − a constitutional law expert explains what that means

  • Written by Wayne Unger, Assistant Professor of Law, Quinnipiac University
imageA judge imposed an unusual sentence on President-elect Donald Trump in his criminal hush money case.boonchai wedmakawand/Getty Images

Donald Trump is now a convicted felon, and will be the first president of the United States with a felony conviction.

On Jan. 10, 2025, Justice Juan Merchan, who presided over the trial in a New York state court,...

Read more: Trump gets an ‘unconditional discharge’ in hush money conviction − a constitutional law expert...

Wildfire smoke inside homes can create health risks that linger for months − tips for cleaning and staying safe

  • Written by Colleen E. Reid, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Colorado Boulder
imageSmoke from several wind-driven wildfires spread through large parts of the Los Angeles area in early January 2025.AP Photo/Ethan Swope

When wildfires spread into neighborhoods, they burn all kinds of materials found in cars and houses and everything around them – electronics, paint, plastics, furniture.

Research shows that the mix of chemicals...

Read more: Wildfire smoke inside homes can create health risks that linger for months − tips for cleaning and...

How the U.S. could in fact make Canada an American territory

  • Written by Robert Huish, Associate Professor in International Development Studies, Dalhousie University

We take nothing by conquest…Thank God,” wrote the National Intelligencer and Washington Advertiser, an influential Washington newspaper, in February 1847.

The United States had just purchased 55 per cent of Mexico for US$15 million as part of the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo. The pact concluded the bloody Mexican-American War,...

Read more: How the U.S. could in fact make Canada an American territory

More Articles ...

  1. 2024’s extreme ocean heat leaves 2 mysteries to solve
  2. 2024’s extreme ocean heat breaks records again, leaving 2 mysteries to solve
  3. Trump’s Greenland bid is really about control of the Arctic and the coming battle with China
  4. Germany and US have long been allies - that could change with Trump
  5. Birkin handbags, Walmart’s ‘Wirkin’ and the meme-ification of class warfare
  6. How midlife became a crisis
  7. Trees ‘remember’ wetter times − never having known abundant rain could buffer today’s young forests against climate change
  8. I study modern-day slavery − and here’s what I’ve learned about how enslavers try to justify their actions
  9. 3 myths about rural education that are holding students back
  10. How the world fell in love with plastic without thinking through the consequences – podcast
  11. How Santa Ana winds fueled the deadly fires in Southern California
  12. Trump won’t rule out force to take Greenland – a country with a complex colonial history
  13. Trump’s push to control Greenland echoes US purchase of Alaska from Russia in 1867
  14. Want to quit vaping this year? Here’s what the evidence shows so far about effective strategies
  15. 3 ways Trump’s EPA could use the language of science to weaken pollution controls
  16. Logging off life but living on: How AI is redefining death, memory and immortality
  17. Nuclear fusion could one day be a viable clean energy source – but big engineering challenges stand in the way
  18. Selfish or selfless? Anti-natalists say they’re going child-free to protect the kids they won’t have
  19. Interior secretary manages vast lands that all Americans share − and can sway the balance between conservation and development
  20. Gender balance in computer science and engineering is improving at elite universities but getting worse elsewhere
  21. Who owns that restaurant? The answer can affect food safety in unexpected ways, researchers find
  22. Jean-Marie Le Pen died knowing his extremist far-right politics have been successfully mainstreamed in France
  23. Vitamin deficiency may be why you’re so tired – a nutritional neuroscientist explains how to kickstart your energy by getting essential nutrients in a well-rounded diet, along with more sleep and exercise
  24. Unlikely bedfellows: How platform companies shortchange porn performers and ride-hailing drivers alike
  25. Providing driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants improves birth outcomes, research shows
  26. Technology is supposed to decrease teacher burnout – but we found it can sometimes make it worse
  27. Brain monitoring may be the future of work – how it’s used could improve employee performance or worsen discrimination
  28. Planning for spring’s garden? Bees like variety and don’t care about your neighbors’ yards
  29. Trudeau taps out: How Trump’s taunts and tariff threats added to domestic woes confronting Canada’s long-standing PM
  30. Americans’ rage at insurers goes beyond health coverage – the author of ‘Delay, Deny, Defend’ points to 3 reforms that could help
  31. How Christian nationalism played a role in incorporating the phrase ‘so help me God’ in the presidential oath of office
  32. That Arctic blast can feel brutally cold, but how much colder than ‘normal’ is it really?
  33. What Shakespeare revealed about the chaotic reign of Richard III – and why the play still resonates in the age of Donald Trump
  34. Nearly 54% of extreme conservatives say the federal government should use violence to stop illegal immigration
  35. Plants that evolved in Florida over millennia now face extinction and lack protection
  36. Microbes can colonize space, produce drugs and create energy − researchers are simulating their inner workings to harness how
  37. What is a war crime?
  38. Here’s what happens when teachers tailor their lessons to students’ individual learning styles
  39. Relentless warming is driving the water cycle to new extremes, the 2024 global water report shows
  40. Mainstream media faces a credibility crisis – my journalism research shows how the news can still serve the public
  41. Will AI revolutionize drug development? Researchers explain why it depends on how it’s used
  42. Is the American Dream achievable? These students are examining its promises and pitfalls
  43. Tech law in 2025: a look ahead at AI, privacy and social media regulation under the new Trump administration
  44. Afghanistan shows what investing in women’s education – or divesting – can do to an economy
  45. Can science be both open and secure? Nations grapple with tightening research security as China’s dominance grows
  46. New Orleans attacker’s apparent loyalty to Islamic State group highlights persistent threat of lone wolf terrorism
  47. Mindfulness is about ‘remembering’ − a practice of coming back to the now
  48. Selling fear: Marketing for cybersecurity products often leaves consumers less secure
  49. Righting a wrong, name by name − the Irei monument honors Japanese Americans imprisoned by the US government during World War II
  50. How effective is tutoring in the United States? – 4 essential reads