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Opioid crisis shows partnering with industry can be bad for public health

  • Written by Jonathan H. Marks, Director of the Bioethics Program and affiliate faculty in Law and International Affairs, Pennsylvania State University
What is each partner looking to get?Africa Studio/Shutterstock.com

“Show me the bodies!” someone demanded at the end of my lecture a few years ago.

As a scholar of public health ethics, law and policy, I had just warned an audience of professors and university administrators about the perils of partnering with, or taking money from,...

Read more: Opioid crisis shows partnering with industry can be bad for public health

#MeToo whistleblowing is upending A century-old legal precedent in US demanding loyalty to the boss

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon

When was the last time you agreed to keep a secret?

Perhaps it was a personal confidence shared by a close family member or friend. Or it might have been in a contract with your employer to safeguard confidential information. Either way, you probably felt a strong sense of obligation to keep that secret.

At least when it comes to the workplace,...

Read more: #MeToo whistleblowing is upending A century-old legal precedent in US demanding loyalty to the boss

4 things to know about Ash Wednesday

  • Written by William Johnston, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Dayton
US Navy employees receive the sacramental ashes during an Ash Wednesday celebration.U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Brian May

For Christians, the death and resurrection of Jesus is a pivotal event commemorated each year during a season of preparation called Lent and a season of celebration called Easter.

The day that...

Read more: 4 things to know about Ash Wednesday

#MeToo whistleblowing is upending century-old legal precedent demanding loyalty to the boss

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon

When was the last time you agreed to keep a secret?

Perhaps it was a personal confidence shared by a close family member or friend. Or it might have been in a contract with your employer to safeguard confidential information. Either way, you probably felt a strong sense of obligation to keep that secret.

At least when it comes to the workplace,...

Read more: #MeToo whistleblowing is upending century-old legal precedent demanding loyalty to the boss

The struggle for coal miners’ health care and pension benefits continues

  • Written by Simon F. Haeder, Assistant Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
Coal miner Scottie Stinson, left, talks with foreman Scott Tiller outside a mine in Welch, W.Va., on May 12, 2016, as he prepares to enter a mine 40 inches high.David Goldman/AP Photo

Coal mining continues to be one of the most hazardous professions in our society. Even today, while the number of large-scale mining disasters and the number of...

Read more: The struggle for coal miners’ health care and pension benefits continues

Mining the Moon

  • Written by Paul K. Byrne, Assistant Professor of Planetary Geology, North Carolina State University
Artist's depiction of a moon base with a view of Earth in the distance. Pavel Chagochkin/Shutterstock.com

If you were transported to the Moon this very instant, you would surely and rapidly die. That’s because there’s no atmosphere, the surface temperature varies from a roasting 130 degrees Celsius (266 F) to a bone-chilling minus 170 C...

Read more: Mining the Moon

Autonomous drones can help search and rescue after disasters

  • Written by Vijayan Asari, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Dayton
Are there people down there who need help?Roschetzky Photography/Shutterstock.com

When disasters happen – whether a natural disaster like a flood or earthquake, or a human-caused one like a mass shooting or bombing – it can be extremely dangerous to send first responders in, even though there are people who badly need help.

Drones are...

Read more: Autonomous drones can help search and rescue after disasters

America's schools are crumbling – what will it take to fix them?

  • Written by Michael Addonizio, Professor of educational leadership and policy studies, Wayne State University
Baltimore schools were shut down temporarily in January 2018 after heating units failed during bitterly cold weather.Patrick Semansky/AP

When I was asked to support a federal lawsuit that says Detroit’s deteriorating schools were having a negative impact on students’ ability to learn, the decision was a no-brainer.

Detroit’s...

Read more: America's schools are crumbling – what will it take to fix them?

What will come after a US withdrawal from Afghanistan?

  • Written by Abdulkader Sinno, Associate Professor of Political Science and Middle Eastern Studies, Indiana University

The United States and the Taliban may be nearing an agreement to withdraw U.S. troops from Afghanistan after more than 17 years of conflict.

In return, the Taliban would commit to refusing access to anti-American organizations such as al-Qaida on its territory.

How did we get to this point – and what will be the consequences of such an...

Read more: What will come after a US withdrawal from Afghanistan?

Kashmir conflict is not just a border dispute between India and Pakistan

  • Written by Chitralekha Zutshi, Professor of History, College of William & Mary
Indian soldiers arrive at the wreckage of an an Indian helicopter that crashed on the Indian side of Kashmir on Feb. 27, 2019.AP Photo/Mukhtar Khan

Tensions between India and Pakistan have diminished in recent days after repeated military clashes in Kashmir led to fear that the two nuclear powers could be on the verge of war.

Kashmir is a disputed...

Read more: Kashmir conflict is not just a border dispute between India and Pakistan

More Articles ...

  1. El origen de los cócteles artesanales es la Ley seca
  2. A letter from Beth Daley
  3. Purdue Pharma taps a Gilded Age history of pharmaceutical fraud
  4. Abortions rise worldwide when US cuts funding to women's health clinics, study finds
  5. Teacher unions say they're fighting for students and schools – what they really want is more members
  6. Netanyahu’s hardline foreign policies may outlast his tenure
  7. 5 ways life would be better if it were always daylight saving time
  8. Fyre debacle shows how smaller acts can get burned in modern music festival economy
  9. Lightweight of periodic table plays big role in life on Earth
  10. EPA's plan to regulate chemical contaminants in drinking water is a drop in the bucket
  11. After Cardinal Pell’s conviction, can a tradition-bound church become more accountable?
  12. Is it more dangerous to let Islamic State foreign fighters from the West return or prevent them from coming back?
  13. Your lungs are really amazing. An anatomy professor explains why
  14. What makes natural gas bottlenecks happen during extreme cold snaps
  15. Why Congress needs to make child care more affordable – 5 questions answered
  16. How SpaceX lowered costs and reduced barriers to space
  17. Trump-Kim summit ends with no deal, but diplomacy is a long process
  18. Crisis de Venezuela: amenazas de Trump a Maduro evocan la historia sangrienta de la intervención de EEUU en América Latina
  19. Crisis de Venezuela: las amenazas de Trump a Maduro evocan la historia sangrienta de la intervención de EEUU en América Latina
  20. What Michael Cohen's betrayal reveals about our messed-up workplace loyalties
  21. 'Micro snails' we scraped from sidewalk cracks help unlock details of ancient earth's biological evolution
  22. How being beautiful influences your attitudes toward sex
  23. What drives the appeal of 'Passion of the Christ' and other films on the life of Jesus
  24. A new way to pay for innovative drugs, provide universal access and not break the bank
  25. Listening in to brain communications, without surgery
  26. Why wealth equality remains out of reach for black Americans
  27. Sequencing the white shark genome is cool, but for bigger insights we need libraries of genetic data
  28. 3 reasons why people fall for politicians' lies about statistics
  29. Michael Cohen's testimony on Trump business reveals conduct that's widespread in corporate America
  30. Michael Cohen's verbal somersault, 'I lied, but I'm not a liar,' translated by a rhetoric expert
  31. Cuba actualiza su Constitución, expandiendo derechos pero posponiendo cambios radicales
  32. What Catholic Church records tell us about America's earliest black history
  33. 3 things schools should teach about America's history of white supremacy
  34. China is catching up to the US on artificial intelligence research
  35. Will terrorism continue to decline in 2019?
  36. A Danish word the world needs to combat stress: Pyt
  37. Cuba expands rights but rejects radical change in updated constitution
  38. Cultured meat seems gross? It's much better than animal agriculture
  39. Newly discovered cold-tolerant plants from Siberia could promote clean bioenergy
  40. Robocalls are unstoppable – 3 questions answered about why your phone won't quit ringing
  41. WTO offers Trump a solution to enforcing a trade deal with a China that breaks promises
  42. America can afford a Green New Deal – here's how
  43. A brief history of North Carolina's 9th District contested election – in 1898
  44. Amazon pullout from NYC shows the perils of partnerships between higher education and business
  45. Is a gene-edited animal a drug?
  46. I build mathematical programs that could discover the drugs of the future
  47. Ospreys' recovery from pollution and shooting is a global conservation success story
  48. Gene-edited food regulations: whether it's a plant or animal shouldn't matter, but it does now
  49. Venezuela crisis: Trump threats to Maduro evoke bloody history of US intervention in Latin America
  50. Trump vs. Congress: The emergency declaration should not be resolved in court