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Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para salvar a su familia

  • Written by Oscar Gil-Garcia, Assistant Professor, Binghamton University, State University of New York
La cerca de la frontera entre los Estados Unidos y México que separa Tijuana, México y San Diego, Calif.AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd

Durante más de una década documenté la deportación de un hombre, el impacto que tuvo en su familia y su eventual regreso a Estados Unidos.

Hice esto como parte de mis estudios de la...

Read more: Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para salvar a su familia

Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para ayudar a la supervivencia de su familia

  • Written by Oscar Gil-Garcia, Assistant Professor, Binghamton University, State University of New York
La cerca de la frontera entre los Estados Unidos y México que separa Tijuana, México y San Diego, Calif.AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd

Durante más de una década documenté la deportación de un hombre, el impacto que tuvo en su familia y su eventual regreso a Estados Unidos.

Hice esto como parte de mis estudios de la...

Read more: Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para ayudar a la supervivencia de su familia

Juul: Why a trendy e-cig is causing a social – and public health – commotion

  • Written by Amy Lauren Fairchild, Associate Dean of Academic Affairs at the School of Public Health, Associate Vice President for Faculty and Academic Affairs at Texas A&M Health Science Center, Professor of Health Policy & Management, Texas A&M Universit
A woman exhaling after taking a hit from a Juul. vaping360.com/juul/juul-vapor-review/, CC BY-SA

The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has launched a campaign to discourage e-cigarette vaping. While it targeted all e-cigarette vaping, the campaign makes a powerful visual reference to Juul, a device that can be recharged in a computer...

Read more: Juul: Why a trendy e-cig is causing a social – and public health – commotion

Immigration agents X-raying migrants to determine age isn't just illegal, it's a misuse of science

  • Written by Elizabeth A. DiGangi, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Teeth and bones can tell something about age – but not someone's birthday.Journal of Forensic Dental Sciences, CC BY-NC-SA

A teenager’s father is murdered in Somalia, and the boy travels to the United States seeking asylum. Another teen’s father and brother are murdered by extremist groups in Afghanistan and he too makes his way...

Read more: Immigration agents X-raying migrants to determine age isn't just illegal, it's a misuse of science

Why poverty is rising faster in suburbs than in cities

  • Written by Scott W. Allard, Professor of Social Policy, University of Washington
An American suburb.jansgate/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

In the U.S., the geography of poverty is shifting.

According to a May report from the Pew Research Center, since 2000, suburban counties have experienced sharper increases in poverty than urban or rural counties.

This is consistent with research across the U.S. over the past decade – as well as my...

Read more: Why poverty is rising faster in suburbs than in cities

How can criminals manipulate cryptocurrency markets?

  • Written by Nir Kshetri, Professor of Management, University of North Carolina – Greensboro
Now you see it, now you don't.Syda Productions/Shutterstock.com

Cryptocurrencies like bitcoin are based on systems that are supposed to be inherently protected from fraud. Yet the U.S. Department of Justice has opened a criminal investigation into manipulation of bitcoin prices. How is that sort of activity even possible?

From researching blockchain...

Read more: How can criminals manipulate cryptocurrency markets?

Will Silicon Valley's new company towns end up as failed utopias?

  • Written by Grant Bollmer, Assistant Professor of Communication, North Carolina State University
A retail street in Facebook's proposed Willow Campus. Facebook

Willow Village is a community planned for a 59-acre site in California’s Silicon Valley, between Menlo Park and East Palo Alto.

It will have housing, offices, a grocery store, a pharmacy, and its developers say, maybe even its own cultural center.

There’s one notable thing...

Read more: Will Silicon Valley's new company towns end up as failed utopias?

Missouri's dark money scandal, explained

  • Written by Ciara C Torres-Spelliscy, Leroy Highbaugh Sr. Research Chair and Associate Professor of Law, Stetson University
Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens, before he resigned amid scandalsAP Photo/Jeff Roberson

Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens is finally ready to resign. His sex scandal didn’t force him to step down, but rather allegations that “dark money” improperly financed his winning gubernatorial bid.

During the years I’ve spent writing about the...

Read more: Missouri's dark money scandal, explained

How the US benefits when it educates future world leaders

  • Written by Nathan Urban, Vice Provost for Graduate Studies and Strategic Initiatives, University of Pittsburgh
The decline in international students studying in the U.S. has worldwide implications.Vladimir Mucibabic/www.shutterstock.com

When the number of international students at U.S. colleges and universities declines, commentators often focus on the economic impact the decline will have on individual universities and communities.

As experts who specialize...

Read more: How the US benefits when it educates future world leaders

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