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Will the vice presidential candidates matter this year? Maybe, but not the way you think.

  • Written by Kyle C. Kopko, Associate Professor of Political Science, Elizabethtown College

Veepstakes speculation is rampant as we approach the national conventions for both major political parties.

Media reports have detailed the wide array of options available to Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton as they decide who will be their number twos for this campaign, and perhaps for four or eight years to come.

Who will Trump and Clinton pick?...

Read more: Will the vice presidential candidates matter this year? Maybe, but not the way you think.

Underwater microscope provides new views of ocean-floor sea creatures in their natural setting

  • Written by Jules Jaffe, Research Oceanographer at Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego
imageFluorescent image of the coral _Pocillopora damicornis_. The field of view is approximately 4.1 x 3.4 mm.Andrew D. Mullen/UCSD, CC BY-ND

The Homo sapiens view of our world is all a matter of perspective, and we need to remember that we’re among the larger creatures on Earth. At around 1.7 meters in length, we’re much closer in size to...

Read more: Underwater microscope provides new views of ocean-floor sea creatures in their natural setting

Why debt-free college will not solve the real problems in America's higher education system

  • Written by David H. Feldman, Professor of Economics, College of William & Mary

On July 6, Hillary Clinton took a half-step toward Bernie Sanders’ free public college tuition plan. She proposed partnering with states to zero out tuition by 2020 for families making US$125,000 or less.

We know that American higher education faces serious long-term problems. However, reducing tuition or college debt to zero isn’t the...

Read more: Why debt-free college will not solve the real problems in America's higher education system

From Grexit to Brexit, why EU's mess of rules designed to prevent crisis is causing it

  • Written by Scott L. Greer, Associate Professor, Global Health Management and Policy, University of Michigan
imageThe EU is fraying thanks to its puzzle of fiscal governance policies.EU UK flag via www.shutterstock.com

The European Union, still nursing wounds from its crisis over the euro and “Grexit,” is facing a much more severe threat that strikes at the very heart of the EU’s legitimacy. And the problem concerns the very measures put in...

Read more: From Grexit to Brexit, why EU's mess of rules designed to prevent crisis is causing it

Making the case for a new Olympics model

  • Written by Paul Christesen, Professor of Classics, Dartmouth College

“The Olympic Games in Rio are an unnatural disaster,” The New York Times recently declared.

As someone who has spent two decades studying and writing about the ancient and modern Olympics, I’m not surprised by the pronouncement. It simply fulfills a prophecy many foretold in the months (and years) leading up to the 2016 Olympic...

Read more: Making the case for a new Olympics model

Dear Hillary: Where are the women in your energy strategy?

  • Written by Rebecca Pearl-Martinez, Research Fellow & Head of Renewable Equity Project at the Fletcher School, Tufts University
imageWomen are making inroads in the solar industry, but still represent only about 25 percent of the U.S. solar work force.www.shutterstock.com

Increasing U.S. use of renewable energy is a core component of Hillary Clinton’s campaign platform. She contends that this shift will create jobs and make the United States the world’s 21st-century...

Read more: Dear Hillary: Where are the women in your energy strategy?

Why emotional abuse in childhood may lead to migraines in adulthood

  • Written by Gretchen Tietjen, Professor and Chair of Neurology, University of Toledo
imageMigraine image via www.shutterstock.com.

Child abuse and neglect are, sadly, more common than you might think. According to a 2011 study in JAMA Pediatrics, more than five million U.S. children experienced confirmed cases of maltreatment between 2004 and 2011. The effects of abuse can linger beyond childhood – and migraine headaches might be...

Read more: Why emotional abuse in childhood may lead to migraines in adulthood

What Black Lives Matter means beyond policing reform

  • Written by Garrett Felber, Ph.D. Candidate in American Culture, University of Michigan
imageRiots in Harlem, 1964Wikimedia Commons

After the killing of five police officers in Dallas last week by a lone gunman, where does the Black Lives Matter movement go?

Black Lives Matter co-founder Alicia Garza answered this question, saying she anticipated that the Dallas shooting would “create the conditions for increased security,...

Read more: What Black Lives Matter means beyond policing reform

Slow death: Is the trauma of police violence killing black women?

  • Written by Christen Smith, Assistant Professor of Anthropology and African and African Diaspora Studies, University of Texas at Austin
imageDiamond Reynolds at a rally at the governor's residence, St Paul, Minnesota on July 7, 2016.Lorie Shaull/Flickr, CC BY-SA

Diamond Reynolds’ live stream of Philando Castile bleeding to death after being shot by Officer Jeronimo Yanez has shocked and dismayed our nation.

It is difficult to imagine the pain of witnessing and archiving the death...

Read more: Slow death: Is the trauma of police violence killing black women?

How to sell a product called democracy

  • Written by Philip Kotler, S.C. Johnson & Son Professor of International Marketing, Northwestern University

Marketing – something I know quite a bit about – and democracy are closely connected. Exploring this connection could help us improve not only our country’s electoral and government system, but also the lives of many Americans.

Marketers have a specific mindset. They start by asking what people want and need. They deeply research...

Read more: How to sell a product called democracy

More Articles ...

  1. Is anything ever 'forgotten' online?
  2. Americans think national parks are worth US$92 billion, but we don't fund them accordingly
  3. NATO summit: Despite high public support for defense spending in Europe, discord over burden sharing emerges
  4. Why is it so hard to improve American policing?
  5. A tragic reminder that policing takes a toll on officers, too
  6. Fed's focus on 'too big to fail' won't save taxpayers from next bank bailout
  7. Freaks, geeks, norms and mores: why people use the status quo as a moral compass
  8. Should parents ask their children to apologize?
  9. Public health research reduced smoking deaths -- it could do the same for gun violence
  10. Debunking one of the biggest stereotypes about women in the gaming community
  11. There's more than practice to becoming a world-class expert
  12. What would Abraham Lincoln say to Donald Trump about religion, politics and being a 'Know Nothing'?
  13. Learning to live with wildfires: how communities can become 'fire-adapted'
  14. Can next-generation bomb 'sniffing' technology outdo dogs on explosives detection?
  15. Opioid crisis: How did we get here?
  16. Why are people starting to believe in UFOs again?
  17. Helping ex-prisoners keep out of prison: what works
  18. How video can help police – and the public
  19. Reducing water pollution with microbes and wood chips
  20. How today's crisis in Venezuela was created by Hugo Chávez's 'revolutionary' plan
  21. Is Trump right that the TPP will destroy millions of jobs and cede US sovereignty?
  22. Eid al-Fitr 2016: understanding the differences among America's Muslims
  23. American Islam: a view from the suburbs
  24. The curious history of 'Mein Kampf' in France
  25. Plate tectonics: new findings fill out the 50-year-old theory that explains Earth's landmasses
  26. Why river floodplains are key to preserving nature and biodiversity in the western US
  27. Most Americans believe we should have gun regulation. Here is why those who don’t are winning the debate.
  28. Can slower financial traders find a haven in a world of high-speed algorithms?
  29. Dr. Franklin, I presume? The founder who could have been our founding physician
  30. Fading hope: why the youth of the Arab Spring are still unemployed
  31. Playing a science-based video game? It might be all wrong
  32. Where are new college grads going to find jobs?
  33. Early-onset Alzheimer's: should you worry?
  34. Explaining the Istanbul bombing: Turkey's six foreign policy sins
  35. Green and cool roofs provide relief for hot cities, but should be sited carefully
  36. Is there life after debt for Puerto Rico?
  37. How social media can distort and misinform when communicating science
  38. Concussions and kids: know the signs
  39. How TV dating shows helped change love and marriage in China forever
  40. Bikini islanders still deal with fallout of US nuclear tests, 70 years later
  41. Whatever the soul is, its existence can't be proved or disproved by natural science
  42. Early days of internet offer lessons for boosting 3D printing
  43. Can outsiders help Venezuela in the midst of crisis, again?
  44. Is it time to eliminate tenure for professors?
  45. Why Iran's anti-American hardliners want to buy US-made Boeings for Iran Air
  46. Criminal injustice: Wounds from incarceration that never heal
  47. Thorny technical questions remain for net neutrality
  48. Intolerance on the march: do Brexit and Trump point to global rejection of liberal ideals?
  49. Sex and other myths about weight loss
  50. Just graduated? Does it make you feel like a grown up?