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How bigotry crushed the dreams of an all-black Little League team

  • Written by Chris Lamb, Professor of Journalism, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis

The civil rights movement is often told in terms of court decisions, bus boycotts, lunch counter sit-ins, freedom riders, brutal beatings and racist demagogues. It’s rarely told from the point of view of children, who suffered in ways that left physical and emotional scars.

As hundreds of thousands of spectators convene in Williamsport,...

Read more: How bigotry crushed the dreams of an all-black Little League team

From wine to weed: Keeping the marijuana farm small and local

  • Written by Ryan Stoa, Senior Scholar, Environmental and Natural Resources Law, Florida International University

In November, voters in as many as 12 states will see a marijuana legalization initiative on their ballots. Marijuana is already legal for recreational use in Alaska, Colorado, Oregon, Washington and Washington, D.C. Another 25 states have legalized medical marijuana. The era of marijuana prohibition is rapidly coming to a close.

Unfortunately,...

Read more: From wine to weed: Keeping the marijuana farm small and local

After the NSA hack: Cybersecurity in an even more vulnerable world

  • Written by Nir Kshetri, Professor of Management, University of North Carolina - Greensboro
imageCybersecurity just got even more difficult.Charis Tsevis/flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

It is looking increasingly likely that computer hackers have in fact successfully attacked what had been the pinnacle of cybersecurity – the U.S. National Security Agency (NSA). A few days ago, reports began emerging of claims by a hacking group called the Shadow...

Read more: After the NSA hack: Cybersecurity in an even more vulnerable world

Can a single region in Florida show the state how to adapt to climate change?

  • Written by Karen Vella, Senior Lecturer in Property and Planning, Queensland University of Technology
imageA 2009 flood, worsened by a high tide, in Miami. maxstrz/flickr, CC BY

With every passing year, Southeast Florida faces more pressure to adapt to climate change. The region already experiences the effects of climate change, such as flooding on sunny days during the highest tides of the year, the failure of flood control canals, rapid beach erosion...

Read more: Can a single region in Florida show the state how to adapt to climate change?

Should writing for the public count toward tenure?

  • Written by Amy Schalet, Associate Professor of Sociology, Director of the Public Engagement Project, University of Massachusetts Amherst
imageWhy scholars need to talk about their research with the lay public.AIDSVaccine, CC BY-NC-ND

Many pressing issues have been calling for attention these days – the unprecedented increase in mortality rates among white Americans, the Black Lives Matter movement and the upending of the Republican Party.

At the root of many of these issues are...

Read more: Should writing for the public count toward tenure?

What does social science say about how a female president might lead?

  • Written by Alice H. Eagly, Professor of Psychology; Faculty Fellow Institute for Policy Research; Professor of Management and Organizations, Northwestern University

In this year’s unorthodox presidential election season, the latest campaign foibles can sometimes obscure the unprecedented fact that one major-party candidate for highest office in the United States is a woman. In a country where women have held the right to vote since 1920, it would be a major step to join the approximately 50 percent of...

Read more: What does social science say about how a female president might lead?

A pregnant woman's immune response could lead to brain disorders in her kids

  • Written by Myka Estes, Postdoctoral Researcher in Neuroscience , University of California, Davis

Pregnant women, like everyone, get sick. And like everyone else, their bodies try to fight infection and, importantly, keep it from reaching the growing fetus.

If the mother’s immune system successfully defeats the virus before the developing baby is exposed or if the virus never crosses the placenta, is harm averted?

Counterintuitively, this...

Read more: A pregnant woman's immune response could lead to brain disorders in her kids

DOJ report on Baltimore echoes centuries-old limits on African-American freedom in the Charm City

  • Written by Jessica Millward, Associate Professor of History, University of California, Irvine

African-American rights in Baltimore have always been in jeopardy. The recently released report from the Department of Justice on the Baltimore Police Department is sobering, but not surprising.

As a scholar of early African-American history in Maryland, I see similarities between laws regarding enslaved and free blacks living in Baltimore prior to...

Read more: DOJ report on Baltimore echoes centuries-old limits on African-American freedom in the Charm City

How companies learn what children secretly want

  • Written by Faith Boninger, Research Associate in Education Policy, University of Colorado
imageCompanies use children's data to sell them junk food and other products.Cookie image via www.shutterstock.com

If you have children, you are likely to worry about their safety – you show them safe places in your neighborhood and you teach them to watch out for lurking dangers.

But you may not be aware of some online dangers to which they are...

Read more: How companies learn what children secretly want

Algorithms can be more fair than humans

  • Written by H V Jagadish, Bernard A Galler Collegiate Professor of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, University of Michigan
imageHow fast can it get here?Box delivery image via Hadrian / Shutterstock.com

Amazon recently began to offer same-day delivery in selected metropolitan areas. This may be good for many customers, but the rollout shows how computerized decision-making can also deliver a strong dose of discrimination.

Sensibly, the company began its service in areas...

Read more: Algorithms can be more fair than humans

More Articles ...

  1. Nuclear power deserves a level playing field
  2. Compete or suckle: Should troubled nuclear reactors be subsidized?
  3. Is misuse of prescription painkillers among youth athletes leading to heroin use?
  4. Why the guns-on-campus debate matters for American higher education
  5. Here's what coworkers think when you suck up to your boss
  6. Don't run (and don't laugh): The little-known history of racewalking
  7. Disasters and kids – how to help them recover
  8. The political role of drone strikes in US grand strategy
  9. Range anxiety? Today's electric cars can cover vast majority of daily U.S. driving needs
  10. Not easy being blue: Fatal shootings, job stress make it hard to be a cop
  11. Making college matter
  12. Turkey's post-coup commitment to democracy offers chance to resolve Kurdish crisis
  13. Are U.S. politics beyond a joke?
  14. Parasitic flies, zombified ants, predator beetles – insect drama on Mexican coffee plantations
  15. Beyond borders: Why we need global action to protect migratory birds
  16. Why science and engineering need to remind students of forgotten lessons from history
  17. So what if some female Olympians have high testosterone?
  18. Why get a liberal education? It is the life and breath of medicine
  19. Breaking the fourth wall in human-computer interaction: Really talking to each other
  20. Dusty plasma in the universe and in the laboratory
  21. Is the US electoral system really 'rigged'?
  22. How the IOC effectively maintains a gag order on nonsponsors of the Olympics
  23. As Rio bay waters show, we badly need innovation in treating human wastes
  24. Cotton farmers profit from simple steps to help pollinators
  25. Is the 'lesser of two evils' an ethical choice for voters?
  26. Setting robots in motion, quickly and efficiently
  27. How adult learners are not getting 21st-century skills
  28. Why you shouldn't want to always be happy
  29. Trump's and Clinton's economy plans: eight essential reads
  30. Most students borrow for college, but are they financially literate?
  31. Turkey's coup and the call to prayer: Sounds of violence meet Islamic devotionals
  32. When disaster-response apps fail
  33. Uber's Didi deal dispels Chinese 'El Dorado' myth once and for all
  34. What can a 1.7-million-year-old hominid fossil teach us about cancer?
  35. The flossing flap: Mind your dentist, and floss every night
  36. When doping wasn't considered cheating
  37. Why utilities have little incentive to plug leaking natural gas
  38. Biohybrid robots built from living tissue start to take shape
  39. Some good news on opioid epidemic: Treatment options are expanding
  40. Putin, Obama and the battle for Aleppo
  41. Why save a computer virus?
  42. Remembering Michael Brown: Why black youth are branded as criminals
  43. Here's how competition makes peer review more unfair
  44. Trump's economics speech: seeking conservative cred and kissing babies
  45. How do Olympic athletes pay the electric bill?
  46. Goodbye to the barbershop?
  47. How labor's decline opened door to billionaire Trump as 'savior' of American workers
  48. Record high global migration may give new meaning to 'diaspora'
  49. Fethullah Gülen: public intellectual or public enemy?
  50. Who owns your tattoo? Maybe not you