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Why we'll miss George H.W. Bush, America's last foreign policy president

  • Written by James Goldgeier, Professor at the School of International Service and Visiting Senior Fellow, Council on Foreign Relations, American University School of International Service
Unlike every president who followed him, George H.W. Bush had a background in foreign policy. In 1972, Bush was serving as U.S. ambassador to the U.N.AP Photo/Dave Pickoff

There are many reasons to miss George H.W. Bush, the 41st president of the United States. A World War II hero, he later served his country with great distinction in a number of...

Read more: Why we'll miss George H.W. Bush, America's last foreign policy president

Why companies should help pay for the biodiversity that’s good for their bottom line

  • Written by Joanne Burgess, Assistant Professor of Economics, Colorado State University
Like Dr. Seuss' imaginary truffula trees, baobabs are endangered. Dudarev Mikhail/Shutterstock.com

In the “The Lorax,” an entrepreneur regrets wiping out all the make-believe truffala trees by chopping them down to maximize his short-term gains. As the Dr. Seuss tale ends, the Once-ler – the man responsible for this environmental...

Read more: Why companies should help pay for the biodiversity that’s good for their bottom line

LGBTQ caravan migrants may have to 'prove' their gender or sexual identity at US border

  • Written by Stefan Vogler, Chancellor's Postdoctoral Fellow, University of California, Irvine
LGBTQ migrants traveling with the migrant caravan.AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd

Among the more than 7,000 people who are part of the migrant caravan – a group of Central American refugees fleeing extreme violence in their home countries – a smaller group of about 80 LGBTQ individuals has broken off from the larger group. These individuals...

Read more: LGBTQ caravan migrants may have to 'prove' their gender or sexual identity at US border

G-20 leaders descend on Buenos Aires as host Argentina battles worst economic crisis in a decade

  • Written by Robert H. Scott III, Professor of Economics & Finance, Monmouth University
Protesters carry a banner that reads in Spanish, 'Property of the G20? Who chose?'AP Photo/Sebastian Pani

Leaders of the world’s biggest economies have gathered in Buenos Aires for the annual Group of 20 Summit to discuss some of the most important issues facing the global economy, from the future of work and food security to U.S. President...

Read more: G-20 leaders descend on Buenos Aires as host Argentina battles worst economic crisis in a decade

Dorothy Day -- 'a saint for our times'

  • Written by Sandra Yocum, Associate Professor of Religious Studies, University of Dayton
Dorothy Day, founder of the Catholic Worker Movement, back to camera, speaks with black and white southerners about the problems of segregation during a radio show.AP Photo/H.B. Littell

Dorothy Day died 38 years ago. Her life followed an unorthodox path – moving from rejecting religion in favor of activism to embracing Catholicism and...

Read more: Dorothy Day -- 'a saint for our times'

How mainstream media helps weaponize far-right conspiracy theories

  • Written by Heather Woods, Assistant Professor of Rhetoric and Technology, Kansas State University
Are there invisible forces at work in the world?Grzegorz Zdziarski/Shutterstock.com

Once an anti-Semitic rumor moved from fringe to the mainstream, it took less than two weeks for violence to erupt. The false allegation that liberal philanthropist George Soros was funding or supporting a caravan of Honduran refugees heading to the U.S. spread...

Read more: How mainstream media helps weaponize far-right conspiracy theories

AIDS treatment has progressed, but without a vaccine, suffering still abounds

  • Written by Maureen Miller, Professor, Columbia University Medical Center

I mentioned to a friend, a gay man nearing 60, that World AIDS Day, which has been observed on Dec. 1 since 1988, was almost upon us. He had no idea that World AIDS Day still exists.

This lack of knowledge is a testament to the great accomplishments that have occurred since World AIDS Day was created 30 years ago. It is also due to an accident in...

Read more: AIDS treatment has progressed, but without a vaccine, suffering still abounds

López Obrador takes power in Mexico after an unstable transition and broken campaign promises

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong

Five months after he won a landslide victory in Mexico’s 2018 presidential election on promises to “transform” the country, leftist Andrés Manuel López Obrador will be sworn into office on Dec. 1.

The prolonged transition period – currently one of the the world’s lengthiest – has given Mexicans a...

Read more: López Obrador takes power in Mexico after an unstable transition and broken campaign promises

Most caregivers of people with dementia are family members, and they need help

  • Written by Alan Stevens, Professor of Medicine; Director, Center for Applied Health Research, Texas A&M University
Daily tasks such as cooking and cleaning are out of the reach of many seniors.Nancy Beijersbergen/Shutterstock.com

Family care of an older adult has emerged as an essential element of the U.S. health care system, with 83 percent of long-term care provided to older adults coming from family members or other unpaid helpers. As the population of older...

Read more: Most caregivers of people with dementia are family members, and they need help

More Articles ...

  1. Betsy DeVos has little to show after 2 years in office
  2. Climate change is making soils saltier, forcing many farmers to find new livelihoods
  3. America's dark history of organized anti-Semitism re-emerges in today's far-right groups
  4. The surprising way plastics could actually help fight climate change
  5. How a scientist says he made a gene-edited baby – and what health worries may ensue
  6. Will Trump pardon Manafort?
  7. Swamped by cyberthreats, citizens need government protection
  8. Trump was dealt a winning hand on trade – his hardball negotiating tactics are squandering it
  9. How Salvation Army's red kettles became a Christmas tradition
  10. What big data can tell us about how a book becomes a best-seller
  11. Forget lanes – we all need to head together toward preventing firearm injury
  12. Test prep is a rite of passage for many Asian-Americans
  13. 5 ways to help robots work together with people
  14. Low-income parents want a white picket fence, not just money, before getting married
  15. In Georgia's gubernatorial race, Stacey Abrams' strategy may make victory easier for future black candidates in the South
  16. Companies blocked from using West Coast ports to export fossil fuels keep seeking workarounds
  17. Trump, Saudi Arabia and the Khashoggi case: What would Obama have done?
  18. Rogue science strikes again: The case of the first gene-edited babies
  19. The road to enhancement, via human gene editing, is paved with good intentions
  20. The key to fixing the gender gap in math and science: Boost women's confidence
  21. Why aren't there electric airplanes yet?
  22. Kim Kardashian West and ecstasy: A reminder of the social dangers of the drug
  23. Living drugs: Engineering bacteria to treat genetic diseases
  24. Instagram posts suggest e-scooter companies like Bird aren't promoting safe riding to newbies
  25. Why Twitter's cute, heart-shaped 'like' button is not so harmless
  26. How local journalism can upend the 'fake news' narrative
  27. A rush to judgment: The Trump administration is taking science out of air quality standards
  28. Drug treatment targets mutant proteins to stop neurodegenerative diseases
  29. Mexico wants internet access for all. Getting everyone online could reduce poverty, too
  30. College-educated cops enforce the law more aggressively
  31. Smoking rates in US have fallen to all-time low, but how did they ever get so high?
  32. Social Security helped slash elderly poverty to 9.2 percent in the 20th century – that triumph is now in jeopardy
  33. US complicity in the Saudi-led genocide in Yemen spans Obama, Trump administrations
  34. Climate change is driving wildfires, and not just in California
  35. When you're grateful, your brain becomes more charitable
  36. Inspired by sci-fi, an airplane with no moving parts and a blue ionic glow
  37. La publicidad diseñó el Día de Acción de Gracias tal y como se conoce hoy
  38. Virtual reality tours give rural students a glimpse of college life
  39. The government aims to boost ethanol without evidence that it saves money or helps the environment
  40. Why bigotry is a public health problem
  41. Amazon's move will gentrify neighborhoods – at what social cost?
  42. Rock 'n' roll is dying in Bangladesh
  43. In the 1600s Hester Pulter wondered, 'Why must I forever be confined?' – now her poems are online for all to see
  44. Blockchain systems are tracking food safety and origins
  45. Wildfire smoke is becoming a nationwide health threat
  46. Why do Black Friday shoppers throw punches over bargains? A marketing expert explains 'psychological ownership'
  47. Kavanaugh's impact on the Supreme Court and the country may not be as profound as predicted
  48. Preventing infant deaths: The ABCs of safe baby sleep
  49. Fear, more than hate, feeds online bigotry and real-world violence
  50. Parks help cities – but only if people use them