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Racism is such a touchy topic that many US educators avoid it – we are college professors who tackled that challenge head on

  • Written by Adam Seagrave, Associate Professor of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, Arizona State University

It is not easy to teach about race in today’s political and social climate.

One hundred and sixty years after the United States abolished slavery, racial differences continue to spark pervasive misunderstanding, engender social separation and drive political and economic disparities. American educators are naturally intimidated and, at...

Read more: Racism is such a touchy topic that many US educators avoid it – we are college professors who...

Papal elections aren’t always as dramatic as ‘Conclave’ – but the history behind the process is

  • Written by Joelle Rollo-Koster, Professor of Medieval History, University of Rhode Island
imageA view of the Sistine Chapel, where electors choose the new pope, on March 9, 2013, before the start of the conclave that resulted in the election of Pope Francis.AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino

I’m a historian of the medieval papacy and editor of the forthcoming three volumes of the Cambridge History of the Papacy. So it was more or less...

Read more: Papal elections aren’t always as dramatic as ‘Conclave’ – but the history behind the process is

Here’s what happens when a school is located near a cannabis dispensary

  • Written by Angus Kittelman, Assistant Professor of Special Education, University of Missouri-Columbia
imageMiddle schoolers are more likely to walk to school than their younger and older peers.Prostock-Studio via Getty Images

As more states legalize marijuana, researchers are examining the effects of legalization on society. Angus Kittelman, an assistant professor of special education at the University of Missouri-Columbia, and Gulcan Cil, a senior...

Read more: Here’s what happens when a school is located near a cannabis dispensary

Most US book bans target children’s literature featuring diverse characters and authors of color

  • Written by Katherine Spoon, Ph.D. Candidate in Computer Science, University of Colorado Boulder
imageA display of banned books sits in a Barnes & Noble bookstore in Pittsford, N.Y. AP Photo/Ted Shaffrey

Book bans in U.S. schools and libraries during the 2021-22 school year disproportionately targeted children’s books written by people of color – especially women of color – according to a peer-reviewed study we published....

Read more: Most US book bans target children’s literature featuring diverse characters and authors of color

Jails and prisons often fail to protect incarcerated people during natural disasters

  • Written by Benika Dixon, Assistant Professor of Public Health, Texas A&M University
imagePeople who are incarcerated can't protect themselves when a hurricane or wildfire threatens.Brian Vander Brug/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

The United States has almost 2 million people behind bars in prisons, jails and detention centers – the largest such population in any country. Although incarcerated people are locked away from the...

Read more: Jails and prisons often fail to protect incarcerated people during natural disasters

Missing link to Snowball Earth history emerges from some unusual rocks on Colorado’s Pikes Peak

  • Written by Liam Courtney-Davies, Postdoctoral Research Associate in Geological Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
imageRocks can hold clues to history dating back hundreds of millions of years.Christine S. Siddoway

Around 700 million years ago, the Earth cooled so much that scientists believe massive ice sheets encased the entire planet like a giant snowball. This global deep freeze, known as Snowball Earth, endured for tens of millions of years.

Yet, miraculously,...

Read more: Missing link to Snowball Earth history emerges from some unusual rocks on Colorado’s Pikes Peak

Evidence from Snowball Earth found in ancient rocks on Colorado’s Pikes Peak – it’s a missing link

  • Written by Liam Courtney-Davies, Postdoctoral Research Associate in Geological Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
imageRocks can hold clues to history dating back hundreds of millions of years.Christine S. Siddoway

Around 700 million years ago, the Earth cooled so much that scientists believe massive ice sheets encased the entire planet like a giant snowball. This global deep freeze, known as Snowball Earth, endured for tens of millions of years.

Yet, miraculously,...

Read more: Evidence from Snowball Earth found in ancient rocks on Colorado’s Pikes Peak – it’s a missing link

Soaring inflation helped lead Trump to victory – here’s why some of his policies might drive prices higher again

  • Written by Veronika Dolar, Associate Professor of Economics, Pace University
imageCould inflation pick back up?AP Photo/Nam Y. Huh

President-elect Donald Trump owes his political comeback in large part to voters’ concerns over the soaring price of everything from gasoline and housing to coffee and bagels.

Inflation has since come down to levels close to normal thanks in large part to a steep rise in interest rates. But in...

Read more: Soaring inflation helped lead Trump to victory – here’s why some of his policies might drive...

Trump voters said they were angry about the economy – many of them had a point

  • Written by Don Leonard, Assistant Professor of Practice in City and Regional Planning, The Ohio State University

Inflation has slowed down, and real incomes – typical wages adjusted for inflation – have bounced back to levels last seen before the COVID-19 pandemic.

Democrats campaigned in 2024 on the overall strength of the economy. President Joe Biden proclaimed in the days following the election that the U.S. economy is “the strongest in...

Read more: Trump voters said they were angry about the economy – many of them had a point

I’m a neuroscientist who taught rats to drive − their joy suggests how anticipating fun can enrich human life

  • Written by Kelly Lambert, Professor of Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Richmond
imageRats will choose to take a longer route if it means they get to enjoy the ride to their destination.Kelly Lambert, CC BY-ND

We crafted our first rodent car from a plastic cereal container. After trial and error, my colleagues and I found that rats could learn to drive forward by grasping a small wire that acted like a gas pedal. Before long, they...

Read more: I’m a neuroscientist who taught rats to drive − their joy suggests how anticipating fun can enrich...

More Articles ...

  1. Why does everything look flat even though the Earth is round?
  2. How the Taliban are seeking to reshape Afghanistan’s schools to push their ideology
  3. How updated Vatican rules on validating supernatural appearances of Mary will affect the famed pilgrimage site of Medjugorje
  4. Companies are buying up cheap carbon offsets − data suggest it may be more about greenwashing than helping the climate
  5. Companies are buying up cheap carbon offsets − data suggest it’s more about greenwashing than helping the climate
  6. ‘Inflation is radioactive’: Trump’s victory is part of a global populist wave of voters throwing out incumbents
  7. Voters in Arab American strongholds likely tipped Michigan in Trump’s favor
  8. Pennsylvania will keep its divided legislature thanks to split-ticket voters
  9. Boeing workers secure big gains after strike, but the future for organized labor under Trump is uncertain
  10. What should journalists do when the facts don’t matter?
  11. What’s the ‘standard deduction’? An accounting expert explains how it simplifies tax filing and saves most Americans money
  12. Trump’s plans to extend tax cuts and slash red tape will likely spur economic growth − but there’s a cost
  13. Disaster survivors want to rebuild safer, more sustainable homes, but cost misperceptions often stand in the way
  14. Strength training early in life can set up kids and adolescents for a lifetime of health and well-being
  15. 10 states had abortion measures on the ballot – where they passed, where they failed, and what it all means
  16. Compassion amid chaos − how one of America’s greatest poets became a lifeline for wounded soldiers
  17. The election is over − but what is a ‘lame duck’ anyway?
  18. Is AI dominance inevitable? A technology ethicist says no, actually
  19. New Apostolic Reformation evangelicals see Trump as God’s warrior in their battle to win America from satanic forces and Christianize it
  20. How Trump might target DACA recipients and other immigrant groups
  21. How Trump won Pennsylvania − and what the numbers from key counties show about the future of a pivotal swing state
  22. What Trump can do to reverse US climate policy − and what he probably can’t change
  23. The 4 ‘ashramas’ of Hinduism and what they can teach us about aging gracefully
  24. Religions talk about the value of humility − but it can be especially hard for clergy to practice what they preach
  25. Ballot measures to legalize recreational use of cannabis fail in Florida, North Dakota and South Dakota
  26. ‘Yellowstone’ highlights Montana’s long-forgotten connection to the Confederacy
  27. Military veterans are disproportionately affected by suicide, but targeted prevention can help reverse the tide
  28. Microplastics promote cloud formation, with likely effects on weather and climate
  29. America’s glass ceiling remains − here are some of the reasons why a woman may have once again lost the presidency
  30. Iran’s currency was already tumbling − and then news of Trump’s victory broke
  31. Now the Electoral College votes for president – 4 essential reads
  32. What Buddhism can teach in this moment of deep divisions: No person is ‘evil,’ only ‘mistaken’
  33. This course uses crime novels to teach critical thinking
  34. Trump’s comeback victory, after reshaping his party and national politics, looks a lot like Andrew Jackson’s in 1828
  35. What is ‘ballot curing’? Election expert explains the method for fixing errors made when voters cast their ballots
  36. 2024’s quick win for Trump will go down in the history books alongside 1964 and 1980 Election Day landslides
  37. Will the lights go out on Cuba’s communist leaders? With fewer options to prop up economy, their future looks dimmer
  38. Kristallnacht’s legacy still haunts Hamburg − even as the city rebuilds a former synagogue burned in the Nazi pogrom
  39. Carl Sagan’s scientific legacy extends far beyond ‘Cosmos’
  40. Cells have more mini ‘organs’ than researchers thought − unbound by membranes, these rogue organelles challenge biology’s fundamentals
  41. Only 5.3% of welders in the US are women. After years as a writing professor, I became one − here’s what I learned
  42. Beefing up Border Patrol is a bipartisan goal, but the agency has a troubled history of violence and impunity
  43. Is the election making you feel adrift and wobbly? That’s ‘zozobra’ – and Mexican philosophers have some advice
  44. How Native Americans guarded their societies against tyranny
  45. Quincy Jones mastered the art of arrangement, transforming simple tunes into epic soundscapes
  46. The 27 Club isn’t true, but it is real − a sociologist explains why myths endure and how they shape reality
  47. What poll watchers can − and can’t − do on Election Day
  48. Political bickering and policy uncertainty take a toll on business investment, research shows
  49. I’m a Muslim immigrant and a psychiatrist living in Michigan – I haven’t decided how to vote yet
  50. How can Jupiter have no surface? A dive into a planet so big, it could swallow 1,000 Earths