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Where's my package? Common carrier freight lockers can ease city traffic and prevent failed deliveries

  • Written by Barbara Ivanov, Director, Urban Freight Lab, University of Washington
Unloading packages and arranging them for delivery in New York City.AP Photo/Mark Lennihan

Online shopping is a big convenience for many Americans, but porch piracy can ruin the experience. For example, Mikaela Gilbert lived in a row house in West Philadelphia while she studied systems engineering at the University of Pennsylvania. By her junior...

Read more: Where's my package? Common carrier freight lockers can ease city traffic and prevent failed...

Cannabis use in teens not a gateway to conduct problems, study suggests – but risks still exist

  • Written by Dan Romer, Research Director, Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of Pennsylvania
Students rolling a joint in a classroom. Marijuana may not lead them to other drugs, a study suggests.fotoNino/Shutterstock.com

With the legalization of cannabis for adults becoming increasingly widespread, more adolescents will be trying the drug. And parents will be wondering what the consequences will be for their teens should they try and...

Read more: Cannabis use in teens not a gateway to conduct problems, study suggests – but risks still exist

Wisconsin GOP's power grab is a danger to democracy

  • Written by Christopher Beem, Managing Director of the McCourtney Institute of Democracy, Pennsylvania State University
The Wisconsin State CapitolWikipedia/RAHurd, CC BY-SA

In Wisconsin, Democratic candidates won the 2018 elections for governor and attorney general.

But the Republican-controlled legislature quickly introduced and passed lame-duck legislation that takes power away from these incoming officeholders and hands it to the state legislature, which will...

Read more: Wisconsin GOP's power grab is a danger to democracy

Cheap oil is blocking progress on climate change

  • Written by Scott L. Montgomery, Lecturer, Jackson School of International Studies, University of Washington
Ford's F-150 trucks are more popular when gas costs less.AP Photo/Carlos Osorio

The relationship between supply and demand, a fundamental economic concept, holds that when the price of something rises, people use less of it. Similarly, when prices fall, they use more.

And it may seem logical that low oil prices benefit consumers, countries, even...

Read more: Cheap oil is blocking progress on climate change

This Christmas tell your children the real Santa Claus story

  • Written by Lisa Bitel, Professor of History & Religion, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Santa Claus will soon be coming to town, bringing gifts to children.

Santa has several aliases, depending on the part of the world you live in. The English call him Father Christmas, the French know him as Père Noël, and Kris Kringle seems be a version of the Christkind, or Christ Child, who leaves treats for good German Lutherans.

In...

Read more: This Christmas tell your children the real Santa Claus story

Your smartphone apps are tracking your every move – 4 essential reads

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation US
If you feel like you're being watched, it could be your smartphone spying on you.Jakub Grygier/Shutterstock.com

If you have a smartphone, it probably is a significant part of your life, storing appointments and destinations as well as being central to your communications with friends, loved ones and co-workers. Research and investigative reporting c...

Read more: Your smartphone apps are tracking your every move – 4 essential reads

Trump presidency's personnel turmoil stands in stark contrast to the ‘nice guy’ administration of George H. W. Bush

  • Written by Eric Stern, Professor of Political Science, College Emergency Preparedness, Homeland Security and Cybersecurity, University at Albany, State University of New York
Bush with his team in 1991.AP Photo/Ron Edmonds

John Kelly’s resignation as White House chief of staff makes him the latest in a long line of senior officials to leave the Trump administration.

That brings turnover of senior staff at the White House – excluding cabinet-level positions – to 62 percent, which is higher than the past...

Read more: Trump presidency's personnel turmoil stands in stark contrast to the ‘nice guy’ administration of...

Denying transgender identity has serious impact on mental health

  • Written by Bethany Grace Howe, PhD Candidate, Media Studies, University of Oregon
A demonstrator holds a sign against the Houston Equal Rights Ordinance.AP Photo/Pat Sullivan

“Sticks and stones may break my bones – but words will never hurt me,” goes the playground rhyme.

But the adage is only half right, according to my research on transgender mental health.

Words can hurt.

In October, The New York Times...

Read more: Denying transgender identity has serious impact on mental health

Do climate policies ‘kill jobs’? An economist on why they don’t cause massive unemployment

  • Written by Garth Heutel, Associate Professor of Economics, Georgia State University

Climate change will hammer the U.S. economy unless there’s swift action to rein in greenhouse gas emissions from burning fossil fuels, according to the latest National Climate Assessment report.

But President Donald Trump has dismissed this forecast, even though his own administration released a comprehensive synthesis of the best available...

Read more: Do climate policies ‘kill jobs’? An economist on why they don’t cause massive unemployment

Don't stress about what kind of Christmas tree to buy, but reuse artificial trees and compost natural ones

  • Written by Bert Cregg, Professor of Horticulture and Forestry, Michigan State University
Scotch pines on a Christmas tree farm in northern Michigan.Bert Cregg, CC BY-ND

Environmentally conscious consumers often ask me whether a real Christmas tree or an artificial one is the more sustainable choice. As a horticulture and forestry researcher, I know this question is also a concern for the Christmas tree industry, which is wary of losing...

Read more: Don't stress about what kind of Christmas tree to buy, but reuse artificial trees and compost...

More Articles ...

  1. You make decisions quicker and based on less information than you think
  2. Cámaras que identifican a infractores no suponen una mejora para la seguridad vial
  3. Myanmar debates women's rights amid evidence of pervasive sexual and domestic violence
  4. Trump administration seeks to strip more people of citizenship
  5. For many women, tracking their fertility can be an emotional whirlwind
  6. What we can learn from reading Sylvia Plath's copy of 'The Great Gatsby'
  7. How activists are fighting racial disparities in school discipline
  8. 5 things to know about Guantanamo Bay on its 115th birthday
  9. The Trump administration is scrapping a collaborative sage grouse protection plan to expand oil and gas drilling
  10. Those designer babies everyone is freaking out about – it's not likely to happen
  11. What French populists from the '50s can teach us about the 'yellow vests' roiling Paris today
  12. Saudi Arabia is allying with Russia to shore up oil prices as OPEC's power wanes
  13. John Chau may have been influenced by past evangelical missions and their belief in power of faith
  14. Nominating a crony, loyalist or old buddy for attorney general is a US presidential tradition
  15. Mass protests in Colombia mar president's first 100 days but reveal a nation marching toward peace
  16. Beware of natural supplements for sex gain and weight loss
  17. Fight for federal right to education takes a new turn
  18. I used facial recognition technology on birds
  19. Hunting for rare isotopes: The mysterious radioactive atomic nuclei that will be in tomorrow's technology
  20. 3 ways Facebook and other social media companies could clean up their acts – if they wanted to
  21. Could a recession be just around the corner?
  22. Zika y embarazo: análisis de sangre prenatal podría predecir malformaciones fetales
  23. Syria may be using chemical weapons against its citizens again – here's how international law has changed to help countries intervene
  24. Why a 14th-century mystic appeals to today's 'spiritual but not religious' Americans
  25. We've been studying a glacier in Peru for 14 years – and it may reach the point of no return in the next 30
  26. From pledges to action: Cities need to show their climate progress with hard data
  27. The John Birch Society is still influencing American politics, 60 years after its founding
  28. The web really isn't worldwide – every country has different access
  29. Countering misinformation about flu vaccine is harder than it seems
  30. Climate change resilience could save trillions in the long run – but finding billions now to pay for it is the hard part
  31. No president should assume office without a 'fitness for duty' exam
  32. La protección estricta del Amazonas fomenta la productividad agrícola en Brasil
  33. Medicaid work requirements: Where do they stand after the blue wave?
  34. Fecal microbiome transplantation shows promise in treating colitis
  35. What Hanukkah's portrayal in pop culture means to American Jews
  36. Why the rise of populist nationalist leaders rewrites global climate talks
  37. Stool transplantation shows promise treating cancer therapy side effect
  38. We asked artificial intelligence to analyze a graphic novel – and found both limits and new insights
  39. George H.W. Bush's overlooked legacy in space exploration
  40. WhatsApp skewed Brazilian election, proving social media's danger to democracy
  41. Chicago's Safe Passage program costs a lot, but it may provide students safer routes to school
  42. El acceso universal a Internet en México reduciría la pobreza
  43. Opening up mosquito research labs to the community
  44. White nationalist groups are really street gangs, and law enforcement needs to treat them that way
  45. What public universities must do to regain public support
  46. Opening up research labs with modified mosquitoes to the community
  47. Switching to electric vehicles could save the US billions, but timing is everything
  48. Why the next two years are critical for the Paris climate deal's survival
  49. I dig through archives to unearth hidden stories from African-American history
  50. CRISPR babies and other ethical missteps in science threaten China's global standing