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All the battles being waged against fossil fuel infrastructure are following a single strategy

  • Written by Luis Hestres, Assistant Professor of Digital Communication, The University of Texas at San Antonio
Virginia Delegate Chris Hurst, a Democrat, at a Mountain Valley Pipeline protest before he took officeAP Photo/Steve Helber

The activists holding a growing number of protests against oil pipelines and other fossil fuel infrastructure projects from coast to coast are winning some courtroom victories.

For example, a federal appeals court recently...

Read more: All the battles being waged against fossil fuel infrastructure are following a single strategy

Who are Pakistan's Ahmadis and why haven't they voted in 30 years

  • Written by Peter Gottschalk, Professor of Religion, Wesleyan University
A portrait of Imran Khan, whose party won the recent elections, in Islamabad, Pakistan.AP Photo/Anjum Naveed

Pakistani cricket star-turned-politician Imran Khan, is all set to be the country’s new prime minister. His party emerged the single largest in recent elections.

It is only for the second time in the 71-year history of this second...

Read more: Who are Pakistan's Ahmadis and why haven't they voted in 30 years

Programmers need ethics when designing the technologies that influence people's lives

  • Written by Cherri M. Pancake, Professor Emeritus of Electrical Engineering & Computer Science, Oregon State University
What does this code do – and what does it mean?REDPIXEL.PL/Shutterstock.com

Computing professionals are on the front lines of almost every aspect of the modern world. They’re involved in the response when hackers steal the personal information of hundreds of thousands of people from a large corporation. Their work can protect – or...

Read more: Programmers need ethics when designing the technologies that influence people's lives

Your voting habits may depend on when you registered to vote

  • Written by Enrijeta Shino, Graduate Assistant of Poltical Science, University of Florida
Tour by activists from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School to get young people registered.AP Photo/Wilfredo Lee

When eligible citizens register to vote, it doesn’t necessarily mean that they will turn out.

Voting in the U.S. is a two-step process. Citizens in every state except North Dakota must first register before casting a ballot.

As we...

Read more: Your voting habits may depend on when you registered to vote

A night enforcing immigration laws on the US-Mexico border

  • Written by Robert Lee Maril, Professor of sociology, East Carolina University

Since the beginning of his presidential campaign, the U.S.-Mexico border has been a focus of Donald Trump’s anger and political appeal.

That border is where more than 18,500 of the country’s 19,437 Border Patrol agents work, trying to stop people from crossing illegally into the U.S.

For all the heat and headlines around this border,...

Read more: A night enforcing immigration laws on the US-Mexico border

5 razones por las cuales la pesadilla de Venezuela podría empeorar, con o sin los drones asesinos

  • Written by Andrea Oelsner, Associate professor, Universidad de San Andrés (Argentina)
La esposa del presidente venezolano Nicolás Maduro reacciona a una explosión el 4 de agosto, supuestamente el resultado de un ataque por drones al presidente.Venezolana de Television via AP

Un presunto intento de asesinato por drones. Un golpe de estado, frustrado. Llamadas a una invasión militar por tropas internacionales. Sanc...

Read more: 5 razones por las cuales la pesadilla de Venezuela podría empeorar, con o sin los drones asesinos

Ida B. Wells: How grassroots support and social media made a monumental difference in honoring her legacy

  • Written by Michelle Duster, Lecturer of Business Writing, Business and Entrepreneurship Department, Columbia College Chicago
Michelle Duster holding a portrait of her great-grandmother, Ida B. WellsAP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast

I learned at an early age that my great-grandmother, Ida B. Wells, was a force to be reckoned with.

Born a slave in Mississippi, she became a leading civil rights activist when she sued the Chesapeake, Ohio & Southwestern Railroad for...

Read more: Ida B. Wells: How grassroots support and social media made a monumental difference in honoring her...

The US needs to get over its obsession with GDP

  • Written by Sophie Mitra, Professor of Economics, Fordham University

The Bureau of Economic Analysis on July 27 released the GDP growth rate for the second quarter of 2018: 4.1 percent.

GDP – or gross domestic product – is the rate at which the total value of goods and services produced in the U.S. grew. Together with unemployment and inflation, it usually receives a lot of attention as an indicator of...

Read more: The US needs to get over its obsession with GDP

Smith College incident is latest case of racial 'profiling by proxy'

  • Written by Brian N. Williams, Visiting Professor of Public Policy, University of Virginia
Racial minorities face profiling on campus.Mr. Doomits/www.shutterstock.com

Smith College has opened an investigation into a July 31 incident in which a staff employee called campus police on a black student who supposedly “seemed to be out of place.”

It turns out the student, Oumou Kanoute, who had a summer job with the college, was simp...

Read more: Smith College incident is latest case of racial 'profiling by proxy'

Farmers are drawing groundwater from the giant Ogallala Aquifer faster than nature replaces it

  • Written by Char Miller, W. M. Keck Professor of Environmental Analysis and History, Pomona College
Water from an irrigation system sprays flowering cotton plants on the farm of Allen Entz in Hydro, Okla, Aug. 16, 2012.AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki

Every summer the U.S. Central Plains go dry, leading farmers to tap into groundwater to irrigate sorghum, soy, cotton, wheat and corn and maintain large herds of cattle and hogs. As the heat rises, anxious...

Read more: Farmers are drawing groundwater from the giant Ogallala Aquifer faster than nature replaces it

More Articles ...

  1. As Russians hack the US grid, a look at what's needed to protect it
  2. Americans, stop obsessing over GDP
  3. Think Confederate monuments are racist? Consider pioneer monuments
  4. Save money when traveling abroad by thinking like an economist
  5. Funding basic research plays the long game for future payoffs
  6. Humans gave leprosy to armadillos – now they are giving it back to us
  7. What philosophers have to say about eating meat
  8. Frente a movilización masiva para el aborto legal en Argentina, la Iglesia católica modera su tono
  9. Facing a groundswell of support for legal abortion, Argentina's Catholic Church moderates its tone
  10. Violencia crónica de México afecta la salud mental, con consecuencias fatales: más suicidios
  11. Police kill about 3 men per day in the US, according to new study
  12. Vladimir Putin's lying game
  13. Brains keep temporary molecular records before making a lasting memory
  14. What makes a good friend?
  15. Why stretching is (still) important for weight loss and exercise
  16. Why adjusting capital gains for inflation makes economic sense
  17. Brazilian evangelicals, swinging hard to the right, could put a Trump-like populist in the presidency
  18. How Trump's trade war affects working-class Americans
  19. #MeToo movement finds an unlikely champion in Wall Street with the new ‘Weinstein clause’
  20. Mapping Brazil's political polarization online
  21. Can you be Christian and support the death penalty?
  22. What colleges must do to promote mental health for graduate students
  23. Ancient arts are inspiring modern electronics
  24. Why 'Nigerian Prince' scams continue to dupe us
  25. It's harder than you might expect for charities to give back tainted money
  26. Here's what we know about CRISPR safety – and reports of 'genome vandalism'
  27. Does Monsanto's Roundup cause cancer? Trial highlights the difficulty of proving a link
  28. Trump administration and California are on collision course over vehicle emissions rules
  29. ¿Por qué duelen tanto las cortadas con papel?
  30. Lawyers defending immigrant children in detention are relying on a court case from the 80s
  31. Will the Supreme Court overturn Roe v. Wade? And if it does, what happens to abortion rights?
  32. Rising suicides in Mexico expose the mental health toll of living with extreme, chronic violence
  33. Genetic testing: Should I get tested for Alzheimer's risk?
  34. What is a blockchain token?
  35. A high-adrenaline job: 5 questions answered about fighting wildfires
  36. No sufra desvelos: existen muchas soluciones para dormir mejor
  37. Print-your-own gun debate ignores how the US government long provided and regulated firearms
  38. From gun kits to 3D printable guns, a short history of rogue gun makers
  39. Bird DNA helps explain Amazonian rivers' role in evolution
  40. Alan Alda living with Parkinson's – a neurologist explains treatment advances
  41. New sanctions on Russia and Iran are unlikely to work. Here's why
  42. The infantilization of Western culture
  43. Overhydrating presents health hazards for young football players
  44. The demise of US nuclear power in 4 charts
  45. Parts of the Pacific Northwest's Cascadia fault are more seismically active than others – new imaging data suggests why
  46. Is Trump profiting from his office in violation of the Constitution? Judge allows emoluments case to move ahead
  47. What the early church thought about God's gender
  48. Why I use Harry Potter to teach a college course on child development
  49. Citizenship through the eyes of those who have lost the right to vote
  50. Niños centroamericanos siguen migrando a EEUU porque huyen de la muerte