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Cuatro cosas que puedes hacer para protegerte de la gripe

  • Written by Arnold Monto, Professor, Epidemiology, University of Michigan
Donnie Cárdenas, en la cama, espera con su compañero de cuarto Torrey Jewett en el Palomar Medical Center en Escondido, California, el 10 de enero de 2018. Cárdenas tuvo gripe.AP Photo/Greg Bull

Esta temporada de gripe o influenza ha sido particularmente seria, habiendo provocado varios muertes en México, Brasil y otros...

Read more: Cuatro cosas que puedes hacer para protegerte de la gripe

¿Por qué los abogados representan a los immigrantes de manera gratuita?

  • Written by Eduardo Capulong, Associate Dean for Clinical and Experiential Education; Professor of Law, The University of Montana
Una madre hondureña y su hijo con un agente de la Patrulla Fronteriza. AP/David J. Phillip

Muchos abogados, asistentes legales y estudiantes de derecho se ofrecen como voluntarios para ayudar a familias inmigrantes que se encuentran en el punto de mira de la propuesta de la administración Trump de reducir drásticamente el...

Read more: ¿Por qué los abogados representan a los immigrantes de manera gratuita?

Short-term health plans: A junk solution to a real problem

  • Written by Simon F. Haeder, Assistant Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
Sen. Lindsey Graham, R.-S.C., left, and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell pictured Sept. 26, 2017 before the vote on Graham's bill to gut Obamacare. Like others before it, the bill failed.Andrew Harnik/AP

After failing to overturn most of the Affordable Care Act in a very public fight, President Donald Trump has been steadily working behind...

Read more: Short-term health plans: A junk solution to a real problem

A Texas city discovered a mass grave of prison laborers. What should it do with the bodies?

  • Written by Andrea Roberts, Assistant Professor, Texas A&M University
After the Civil War, Texas's sugar cane plantations were still farmed by unpaid black laborers – prisoners forced to work for free in a system called 'convict leasing.' Author provided

When archaeologists discovered the intact skeletons of 15,000 free and enslaved Africans at a construction site in lower Manhattan in 1991, the federal...

Read more: A Texas city discovered a mass grave of prison laborers. What should it do with the bodies?

Keeping the electricity grid running – 4 essential reads

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation US
A man reads the newspaper by flashlight during the Northeast Blackout in August 2003.AP Photo/Joe Kohen

On Aug. 14, 2003, a software bug contributed to a blackout that left 50 million people across nine U.S. northeastern states and a Canadian province without power. The outage lasted for as long as four days, with rolling blackouts in some areas...

Read more: Keeping the electricity grid running – 4 essential reads

What Harvard can learn from Texas: A solution to the controversy over affirmative action

  • Written by David Orentlicher, Professor of Law and Co-Director, Health Law Program, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
Top 10 percent policies could help universities such as Harvard achieve diversity.f11photo/www.shutterstock.com

When it comes to the use of race-conscious affirmative action in college admissions, no one seems to be happy with the way it’s playing out.

Opponents charge that taking into account an applicant’s race or ethnicity amounts to...

Read more: What Harvard can learn from Texas: A solution to the controversy over affirmative action

From slag to swag: The story of Earl Tupper's fantastic plastics

  • Written by Marsha Bryant, Professor of English & Distinguished Teaching Scholar, University of Florida
A postcard from the 1950s advertises a variety Tupperware products.Thomas Hawk, CC BY-NC

When “American Horror Story,” the Museum of Modern Art and “Napoleon Dynamite” pay homage to an invention, you know it’s made a cultural impact in a big way.

Tupperware has a staying power that most plastic products don’t. So...

Read more: From slag to swag: The story of Earl Tupper's fantastic plastics

Why Native Americans struggle to protect their sacred places

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana
People protest the shrinking of Bears Ears National Monument.AP Photo/Rick Bowmer

Forty years ago the U.S. Congress passed the American Indian Religious Freedom Act so that Native Americans could practice their faith freely and that access to their sacred sites would be protected. This came after a 500-year-long history of conquest and coercive...

Read more: Why Native Americans struggle to protect their sacred places

How the media falls short in reporting epidemics

  • Written by Yotam Ophir, Postdoctoral Fellow in Science Communication at the Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of Pennsylvania

Lethal infectious diseases are making headlines again, with 17 confirmed new Ebola cases reported in Congo as of August 8. The news brings back the memories of Americans’ unjustified fear during the 2014 outbreak.

In any outbreak or public health crisis, health organizations such as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention need to...

Read more: How the media falls short in reporting epidemics

Wildfires are inevitable – increasing home losses, fatalities and costs are not

  • Written by Max Moritz, Cooperative Extension Wildfire Specialist at the University of California Forest Research and Outreach; Adjunct Professor Bren School of Environmental Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara
Cal Fire Division Chief Mark Higgins directs helicopters dropping water in Lakeport, California. AP Photo/Noah Berger

Wildfire has been an integral part of California ecosystems for centuries. Now, however, nearly a third of homes in California are in wildland urban interface areas where houses intermingling with wildlands and fire is a natural...

Read more: Wildfires are inevitable – increasing home losses, fatalities and costs are not

More Articles ...

  1. We are guinea pigs in a worldwide experiment on microplastics
  2. ¿Las noticias te estresan? Estas 4 técnicas de entrenamiento mental te ayudarán a calmar el cerebro
  3. ¿Las noticias te estresan? Estas cuatro técnicas de entrenamiento mental te ayudarán a calmar el cerebro
  4. Designed to deceive: How gambling distorts reality and hooks your brain
  5. Immigration activists fighting to abolish ICE have a bigger vision
  6. Saudi women can drive, but are their voices being heard?
  7. The promise of personalized medicine is not for everyone 
  8. Obesity and diabetes: 2 reasons why we should be worried about the plastics that surround us
  9. A socialist's primary win doesn't herald a workers revolution in the US
  10. The start of high school doesn't have to be stressful
  11. America has 1.5 million nonprofits and room for more
  12. The ghost of Roy Orbison goes on tour – and some aren't happy about it
  13. Walmart tried to make sustainability affordable. Here's what happened
  14. Jury finds Monsanto liable in the first Roundup cancer trial – here's what could happen next
  15. ¿Por qué nuestro cerebro siempre encuentra problemas?
  16. How 'story maps' redraw the world using people's real-life experiences
  17. Profit, not free speech, governs media companies' decisions on controversy
  18. Apple's $1 trillion value doesn't mean it's the 'biggest' company
  19. Why Trump shouldn't leverage the government's emergency oil supply to bolster the GOP
  20. What is causing Florida's algae crisis? 5 questions answered
  21. Climate change and wildfires – how do we know if there is a link?
  22. From breast implants to ice cube trays: How silicone took over our kitchens
  23. Flip a switch and shut down seizures? New research suggests how to turn off out-of-control signaling in the brain
  24. Argentina rejects legal abortion — and not all Catholics are celebrating
  25. Heat and Light: Trailer
  26. 5 autores latinos que merecen ser leídos
  27. For universities, making the case for diversity is part of making amends for racist past
  28. How the federal government came to control your car's fuel economy
  29. The case for boosting WNBA player salaries
  30. The world of plastics, in numbers
  31. How pharmacists can help solve medication errors
  32. How new fathers use social media to make sense of their roles
  33. Who are the Sikhs and what are their beliefs?
  34. Can Trump's White House legally ban reporters?
  35. What is insider trading, the crime Rep. Chris Collins was charged with?
  36. Republicans may be panicking over Ohio's special election results
  37. La raza del asesino influye en la cobertura mediática de los tiroteos masivos en EEUU
  38. Audiences love the anger: Alex Jones, or someone like him, will be back
  39. What elephants' unique brain structures suggest about their mental abilities
  40. Capital gains and why they matter – a tax expert explains
  41. All the battles being waged against fossil fuel infrastructure are following a single strategy
  42. Who are Pakistan's Ahmadis and why haven't they voted in 30 years
  43. Programmers need ethics when designing the technologies that influence people's lives
  44. Your voting habits may depend on when you registered to vote
  45. A night enforcing immigration laws on the US-Mexico border
  46. 5 razones por las cuales la pesadilla de Venezuela podría empeorar, con o sin los drones asesinos
  47. Ida B. Wells: How grassroots support and social media made a monumental difference in honoring her legacy
  48. The US needs to get over its obsession with GDP
  49. Smith College incident is latest case of racial 'profiling by proxy'
  50. Farmers are drawing groundwater from the giant Ogallala Aquifer faster than nature replaces it