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Choosing the wrong college can be bad for your mental health

  • Written by Noli Brazil, Assistant Professor of Community & Regional Development, University of California, Davis
How peers perform in college can affect student mental health. mimagephotography/www.shutterstock.com

Going off to college might be a source of anxiety for some students, but once a student is on campus it shouldn’t be a total drag.

But that tends to happen more frequently when a student ends up at a college where the student body is weaker...

Read more: Choosing the wrong college can be bad for your mental health

Before Trump was anti-Cuba, he wanted to open a hotel in Havana

  • Written by William M. LeoGrande, Professor of Government, American University School of Public Affairs

Presidents Raul Castro and Donald Trump both canceled trips to April’s Summit of the Americas in Peru, avoiding a potential confrontation – though U.S. Vice President Mike Pence and Cuban Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez lobbed insults at each other in their stead.

Relations between the United States and Cuba have grown tense...

Read more: Before Trump was anti-Cuba, he wanted to open a hotel in Havana

The real IRS scandal has more to do with budget cuts than bias

  • Written by Philip Hackney, James E. & Betty M. Phillips Professor of Law, Louisiana State University
Members of the tea party movement seen rallying outside the Capitol in 2013. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Conservatives have been seething since 2013 over what they say was an unfair effort by the IRS to scrutinize right-leaning organizations more closely than other groups seeking nonprofit status.

As a report from the Treasury Department’s ins...

Read more: The real IRS scandal has more to do with budget cuts than bias

Bearing witness to Cambodia's horror, 20 years after Pol Pot's death

  • Written by George Chigas, Senior Lecturer in Cambodian Studies, University of Massachusetts Lowell
How do survivors find healing? Chum Mey, a survivor of the Khmer Rouge regime, walks past a portrait of Nuon Chea, a former Khmer Rouge leader.AP Photo/Heng Sinith

Twenty years ago, on April 15, 1998, Pol Pot, the leader of Cambodia’s genocidal government during the late 1970s, died in his sleep at the age of 73. Born Saloth Sar, Pol Pot was...

Read more: Bearing witness to Cambodia's horror, 20 years after Pol Pot's death

The Trump administration's new migratory bird policy undermines a century of conservation

  • Written by Amanda Rodewald, Professor and Director of Conservation Science, Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Cornell University
Tundra swans, which nest in the Arctic and migrate south in fall, alight at Mattamuskeet National Wildlife Refuge in North Carolina.Allie Stewart/USFWS, CC BY

The Trump administration has announced a position on protecting migratory birds that is a drastic pullback from policies in force for the past 100 years.

In 1916, amid the chaos of World War...

Read more: The Trump administration's new migratory bird policy undermines a century of conservation

US airstrikes in Syria nothing more than theater

  • Written by James L. Gelvin, Professor of Modern Middle Eastern History, University of California, Los Angeles

Despite outcries from horrified aficionados of Japanese theater, the term “Kabuki” seems to have found a permanent place in the American political lexicon. The term refers to an act that is more a contrived and ritualized posturing than a useful means to an end.

As someone who has written and taught about the Middle East for more than...

Read more: US airstrikes in Syria nothing more than theater

Syrian Kabuki

  • Written by James L. Gelvin, Professor of Modern Middle Eastern History, University of California, Los Angeles

Despite outcries from horrified aficionados of Japanese theater, the term “Kabuki” seems to have found a permanent place in the American political lexicon. The term refers to an act that is more a contrived and ritualized posturing than a useful means to an end.

As someone who has written and taught about the Middle East for more than...

Read more: Syrian Kabuki

Since Boston bombing, terrorists are using new social media to inspire potential attackers

  • Written by Mia Bloom, Professor of Communication, Georgia State University
Telegram, an encrypted messaging app.vfhnb12 / Shutterstock.com

Five years ago, a deadly attack during the Boston Marathon made America’s nightmare come true: the radicalized boy next door.

The research my colleagues and I conduct at Georgia State University tracks how terrorist organizations expose people – mostly young men – to...

Read more: Since Boston bombing, terrorists are using new social media to inspire potential attackers

Syria, chemical weapons and the limits of international law

  • Written by Andrew Bell, Assistant Professor of International Studies, Indiana University
A Syrian soldier films the damage of the Syrian Scientific Research Center which was attacked by U.S., British and French military strikes.AP Photo/Hassan Ammar

Consider this shocking fact: Despite horrific images of yet another reported chemical weapons attack in Syria, the U.S.-led humanitarian intervention to protect civilians on April 13 was...

Read more: Syria, chemical weapons and the limits of international law

What to do if you owe the IRS money

  • Written by Tameka E. Lester, Clinical Assistant Professor and Assistant Director of the Philip C. Cook Low-Income Taxpayer Clinic, Georgia State University
The IRS is friendlier than you think.Shutterstock.com

Tax Day is finally here once more. If you’re getting a refund, lucky you. But if you owe the government money, you may be worried that you have to pay the amount due by the filing deadline of April 17 – even if you asked for an extension.

Owing the IRS – especially when you...

Read more: What to do if you owe the IRS money

More Articles ...

  1. How the new estate tax rules could reduce charitable giving by billions
  2. What does the Speaker of the House do?
  3. I'm an expat US scientist – and I'm returning to Trump's America to stand up for science
  4. Mariah Carey says she has bipolar disorder; a psychiatrist explains what that is
  5. 5 food trends that are changing Latin America
  6. How the CIA's secret torture program sparked a citizen-led public reckoning in North Carolina
  7. Wealthy Americans know less than they think they do about food and nutrition
  8. The deaths of 76 Branch Davidians in April 1993 could have been avoided – so why didn't anyone care?
  9. How Facebook could reinvent itself – 3 ideas from academia
  10. Supreme Court case tests weight of old Native American treaties in 21st century
  11. Night owls may have 10 percent higher risk of early death, study says
  12. Facebook's social responsibility should include privacy protection
  13. Assassination in Brazil unmasks the deadly racism of a country that would rather ignore it
  14. Don't shoot: When Dallas police draw their guns, they usually choose not to fire
  15. Resistance to school integration in the name of 'local control': 5 questions answered
  16. Lawyers keep secrets locked up – that’s why they get asked to do the dirty work
  17. The urgency of curbing pollution from ships, explained
  18. Overeating? It may be a brain glitch
  19. Rebuilding trust in the media from the bottom up
  20. Reading Zuckerberg’s face: What 3 key expressions from his testimony reveal
  21. Why remembering matters for healing
  22. To serve a free society, social media must evolve beyond data mining
  23. Should California winemakers be worried about China's tariffs?
  24. The law that made Facebook what it is today
  25. A school resource officer in every school?
  26. When presidents lawyer up: A brief history
  27. 3 research-based things a doctor says should be part of your weight loss efforts
  28. Bolivia is not Venezuela – even if its president does want to stay in power forever
  29. Women earn less after they have kids, despite strong credentials
  30. Stand up for science: More researchers now see engagement as a crucial part of their job
  31. Now that Russia has apparently hacked America's grid, shoring up security is more important than ever
  32. How you helped create the crisis in private data
  33. Stock investors on higher floors take more risks – here's why
  34. Why the label 'cult' gets in the way of understanding new religions
  35. Why can't Trump just take out Assad?
  36. Trump national security staff merry-go-round reflects decades of policy competition and conflict
  37. The Trump administration, slanted science and the environment: 4 essential reads
  38. Fragmented US privacy rules leave large data loopholes for Facebook and others
  39. From certain war to uncertain peace: Northern Ireland's Good Friday Agreement turns 20
  40. Remind us: What exactly is the National Guard?
  41. Brazil in political crisis over jailed president: 4 essential reads
  42. Porn 'disruption' makes Stormy Daniels a rare success in increasingly abusive industry
  43. Local media struggle to hold Sinclair accountable
  44. Mormonism's newest apostles reflect growing global reach
  45. Election security means much more than just new voting machines
  46. Why the extreme reaction to Obamacare could be the new normal in American politics
  47. Why nuclear fusion is gaining steam – again
  48. Goodbye Kepler, hello TESS: Passing the baton in the search for distant planets
  49. Why double-majors might beat you out of a job
  50. Why weather forecasters still struggle to get the big storms right