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Could Atlanta be on track to elect a white mayor?

  • Written by Andra Gillespie, Associate Professor, Political Science, Emory University
imageAtlanta mayoral candidates Keisha Lance Bottoms (left) and Mary Norwood will face off in December.AP Photo/David Goldman

On Nov. 7, none of the 12 candidates for mayor of Atlanta received more than 50 percent of the vote.

That means the two candidates with the most votes, Councilwomen Keisha Lance Bottoms and Mary Norwood, will face off in a Dec. 5...

Read more: Could Atlanta be on track to elect a white mayor?

Why solar 'microgrids' are not a cure-all for Puerto Rico's power woes

  • Written by Peter Fox-Penner, Director, Institute for Sustainable Energy, and Professor of Practice, Questrom School of Business, Boston University

In addition to its many other devastating human consequences, Hurricane Maria left the island of Puerto Rico with its power grid in ruins. Power was knocked out throughout the island, with an estimated 80 percent of its transmission and distribution wires incapacitated. When hospitals and other critical users could not get backup power and water...

Read more: Why solar 'microgrids' are not a cure-all for Puerto Rico's power woes

How the tax package would slam higher ed

  • Written by Ted Afield, Associate Clinical Professor and Director of the Philip C. Cook Low-Income Taxpayer Clinic, Georgia State University
imageThe proposed tax bill could make higher ed even less affordable. AP Photo/Rich Pedroncelli

The tax code overhaul pending in Congress is littered with provisions that would make it a lot harder for most Americans to go to college or grad school.

All told, the changes proposed by House Republicans would require Americans to spend US$65 billion more to...

Read more: How the tax package would slam higher ed

Public shaming of workplace harassers may force employers to stop protecting them

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon
imageCompanies are likely taking notice as more women speak up about workplace harassment.AP Photo/Paul Sancya

Since the Harvey Weinstein scandal broke, a growing number of workplace harassment victims have decided to go public. Since this used to be pretty rare, it marks an important shift.

Along with the torrent of harassment revelations through the...

Read more: Public shaming of workplace harassers may force employers to stop protecting them

Democrats' sweep of Virginia shows the state is moving beyond its Confederate past

  • Written by Toni-Michelle C. Travis, Professor of American Politics, George Mason University

In its first election since Trump became president, Virginia gave Democrats a sweeping victory. This one-time swing state and former Confederate capital elected Democrats in all three statewide races – governor, lieutenant governor and attorney general.

Lt. Gov. Ralph Northam, a mild-mannered physician from Virginia’s eastern shore,...

Read more: Democrats' sweep of Virginia shows the state is moving beyond its Confederate past

The emotional challenges of student veterans on campus

  • Written by Ann Cheney, Assistant Professor, Center for Healthy Communities, University of California, Riverside
imageFor veterans going back to school, student life can involve many stresses.US Department of Education, CC BY

This Veterans Day, Americans will honor the heroism and sacrifice of the nearly 22 million men and women who have served in the U.S. military. Among them will be student veterans. Since 2009, nearly one million veterans have benefited from...

Read more: The emotional challenges of student veterans on campus

The magazine that inspired Rolling Stone

  • Written by Peter Richardson, Coordinator, American Studies, San Francisco State University
image'When you look back on it, where else would those articles appear? The Saturday Evening Post?'Nick Lehr/The Conversation via flickr, CC BY-SA

The 50th anniversary of Rolling Stone magazine has arrived, and not without fanfare. Joe Hagan’s biography of co-founder Jann Wenner appeared in October to stellar reviews, and earlier this month, HBO...

Read more: The magazine that inspired Rolling Stone

Gun violence in the US kills more black people and urban dwellers

  • Written by Molly Pahn, Research Manager, Boston University
imageA man changes a flag to half-staff near the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs.AP Photo/Eric Gay

On Nov. 5, just 35 days after the deadly Las Vegas shooting, a man walked into a church in a small Texas town and murdered 26 people with an assault rifle. The coverage dominated the news.

But the day before, even more people – 43 –...

Read more: Gun violence in the US kills more black people and urban dwellers

The climate science report Trump hoped to ignore will resonate outside of Washington, DC

  • Written by Gary W. Yohe, Huffington Foundation Professor of Economics and Environmental Studies, Wesleyan University
imageFlooding in Port Arthur, Texas during Hurricane Harvey, Aug. 31, 2017. According to the Climate Science Special Report released on Nov. 2, heavy precipitation events are becoming more frequent and intense in most regions of the world.SC National Guard

Last week, without comment, the White House published a study officially titled the Climate...

Read more: The climate science report Trump hoped to ignore will resonate outside of Washington, DC

As angry voters reject major parties, Mexico's 2018 presidential race grows chaotic

  • Written by Salvador Vázquez del Mercado, Conacyt Research Professor, National Laboratory of Public Policy, Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas

Mexico’s 2018 campaign season has not officially begun, but the race for the presidency is already a nail-biter, featuring a powerful ruling party, dozens of independent aspirants – including two women – and very strange bedfellows.

In my two decades analyzing Mexican elections as both an academic and a pollster, I have never...

Read more: As angry voters reject major parties, Mexico's 2018 presidential race grows chaotic

More Articles ...

  1. GOP plan to tax college endowments like Yale's and Harvard's would be neither fair nor effective
  2. The challenge of authenticating real humans in a digital world
  3. When Americans tried – and failed – to reunite Christianity
  4. Northam win in Virginia shows why newspapers should stop endorsing candidates
  5. Mass shootings in America: 4 essential reads
  6. 3 things I learned from delivering medical aid to a remote part of Puerto Rico
  7. The long, strange history of dieting fads
  8. Does American culture shame too much – or not enough?
  9. Rather than being free of values, good science is transparent about them
  10. Latino elites are paying the California dream forward
  11. One American woman's life in revolutionary Russia
  12. Two big problems with American voting that have nothing to do with Russian hacking
  13. Taxpayers are subsidizing hush money for sexual harassment and assault
  14. Improving women's lives through energy: What Rick Perry got right and wrong
  15. Why social media may not be so good for democracy
  16. Academic journal publishing is headed for a day of reckoning
  17. How citizen investigators can collaborate on crowdsourced fact-checking
  18. Maria will fundamentally change US policy toward Puerto Rico
  19. The curious relationship between altitude and suicide
  20. How burnout is plaguing doctors and harming patients
  21. 'Voodoo economics' makes a comeback in Republican tax plan enriching the rich
  22. As wildfires expand, fire science needs to keep up
  23. How does an oppressive government celebrate a revolution?
  24. How does an authoritarian regime celebrate a revolution?
  25. To stop the opioid epidemic, the White House should embrace prevention
  26. How dogs and cats can get their day in court
  27. It's mostly mothers who pass on mitochondria – and a new theory says it's due to the first sexual conflict
  28. In Brazil, religious gang leaders say they're waging a holy war
  29. On-board computers and sensors could stop the next car-based attack
  30. Trump names 'safe' choice to lead the Federal Reserve: 5 questions answered
  31. Trump picks 'safe' choice to lead the Federal Reserve: 5 questions answered
  32. In America's sandwiches, the story of a nation
  33. Brain science should be making prisons better, not trying to prove innocence
  34. How the crisis in Catalonia is helping Rajoy consolidate power
  35. What the history of iconoclasm tells us about the Confederate statue controversy
  36. Is daylight saving time worth the trouble? Research says no
  37. Venezuela's opposition is on the verge of collapse
  38. Stop doing companies' digital busywork for free
  39. How donors can help make nonprofits more accountable
  40. US shouldn't give up benefits of 'green card lottery' over low risk of terrorism
  41. What draws 'lone wolves' to the Islamic State?
  42. After months of feuding, Ecuador's president is ousted by his party
  43. What ancient cultures teach us about grief, mourning and continuity of life
  44. Surprise! How Obamacare is beginning to look a lot like Medicaid
  45. Guyana, one of South America's poorest countries, struck oil. Will it go boom or bust?
  46. Why tax cuts make us less happy
  47. Beyond October: Things to be aware of all year about breast cancer
  48. In scandal after scandal, NCAA takes fall for complicit colleges
  49. Real security requires strong encryption – even if investigators get blocked
  50. California's higher education: From American dream to dilemma