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Juneteenth offers new ways to teach about slavery, Black perseverance and American history

  • Written by Raphael E. Rogers, Professor of Practice in Education, Clark University
imageFreedom is a key concept to study.Klaus Vedfelt via Getty Images

Whenever I tell high school students in classes I visit that I appreciated learning about slavery as a child growing up in the Caribbean, they often look confused.

Why, they ask, did I like learning about slavery given that it was so horrible and harsh? How could I value being taught...

Read more: Juneteenth offers new ways to teach about slavery, Black perseverance and American history

Cormac McCarthy's fearless approach to writing

  • Written by Bill Hardwig, Associate Professor of English, University of Tennessee
imageMcCarthy attends the 2009 premiere of the film adaptation of his novel 'The Road.'Evan Agostini/AP Photo

Cormac McCarthy, who died on June 13, 2023, at the age of 89, is often characterized rather narrowly as a Southern writer, or perhaps a Southern Gothic writer.

McCarthy did lean heavily on his Tennessee upbringing in his first four novels, and he...

Read more: Cormac McCarthy's fearless approach to writing

Abortion restrictions put hospital ethics committees in the spotlight – but what do they do?

  • Written by Elizabeth Lanphier, Assistant Professor of Philosophy and Bioethicist, University of Cincinnati
imageEthics decisions are among the hardest hospital staff need to make.Thomas Barwick/Stone via Getty Images

Many states have imposed sweeping restrictions that all but ban abortion since the June 2022 Supreme Court ruling that overturned the 50-year-old constitutional right to the procedure. These laws have created new obstacles for pregnant patients...

Read more: Abortion restrictions put hospital ethics committees in the spotlight – but what do they do?

Southern Baptist Convention votes to expel two churches with female pastors – a religion scholar explains how far back these battles go

  • Written by Susan M. Shaw, Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Oregon State University
imageSBC pastor Rev. Linda Barnes Popham with the choir at Fern Creek Baptist Church in May 21, 2023, in Louisville, Kentucky.AP Photo/Jessie Wardarski

During its two-day annual meeting that began on June 13, 2023, the Southern Baptist Convention reaffirmed the ouster of its largest congregation that ordained women and began a process to amend its...

Read more: Southern Baptist Convention votes to expel two churches with female pastors – a religion scholar...

The US will send depleted uranium munitions to Ukraine – a health physicist explains their military, health and environmental effects

  • Written by Kathryn Higley, Distinguished Professor of Nuclear Science and Engineering, Oregon State University
imageDepleted uranium shells will equip M1A1 Abrams battle tanks, also from the U.S.Lance Cpl. Julio McGraw, USMC/Flickr

The Biden administration has agreed to provide Ukraine with depleted uranium shells to equip M1A1 Abrams tanks that the U.S. is sending there. Britain has already delivered tanks to Ukraine equipped with depleted-uranium shells.

DU...

Read more: The US will send depleted uranium munitions to Ukraine – a health physicist explains their...

Can we train our taste buds for health? A neuroscientist explains how genes and diet shape taste

  • Written by Monica Dus, Associate Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Michigan
imageResearchers are increasingly learning that early diet can shape taste preferences but that our taste buds can also be trained to prefer healthier foods.RichVintage/E+ via Getty Images

Have you ever wondered why only hummingbirds sip nectar from feeders?

Unlike sparrows, finches and most other birds, hummingbirds can taste sweetness because they carry...

Read more: Can we train our taste buds for health? A neuroscientist explains how genes and diet shape taste

George Soros hands control over his family's philanthropy to son Alex, after giving away billions and enduring years of antisemitic attacks and conspiracy theories

  • Written by Armin Langer, Assistant Professor of European Studies, University of Florida
imageGeorge Soros in a 2017 photo.Olivier Hoslet/EPA via AP

Billionaire investor and philanthropist George Soros is handing control of his US$25 billion holdings, including his Open Society Foundations, to one of his sons, Alexander Soros.

As a sociologist who researches immigrants and minorities in Europe and conspiracy theories about them, I study...

Read more: George Soros hands control over his family's philanthropy to son Alex, after giving away billions...

The Global South is forging a new foreign policy in the face of war in Ukraine, China-US tensions: Active nonalignment

  • Written by Jorge Heine, Interim Director of the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, Boston University
imageLula and Modi walking a new diplomatic path.Takashi Aoyama/AFP via Getty Images

What does the Ukraine war have to do with Brazil? On the face of it, perhaps not much.

Yet, in his first six months in office, Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva – now in his third nonconsecutive term – has expended much effort trying to...

Read more: The Global South is forging a new foreign policy in the face of war in Ukraine, China-US tensions:...

Supreme Court affirms Congress's power over Indian affairs, upholds law protecting Native American children

  • Written by Kirsten Matoy Carlson, Professor of Law and Adjunct Professor of Political Science, Wayne State University
imageWiping away tears, Nita Battise, vice chairperson of the tribal council of the Alabama-Coushatta Tribe of Texas, reacts to the Supreme Court ruling upholding a law that gives Native American families priority in adoptions and foster care placements of tribal children.Mandel Ngan/AFP via Getty Images

The Supreme Court affirmed the constitutionality...

Read more: Supreme Court affirms Congress's power over Indian affairs, upholds law protecting Native American...

Generative AI is a minefield for copyright law

  • Written by Robert Mahari, JD-PhD Student, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
imageStill from 'All watched over by machines of loving grace' by Memo Akten, 2021. Created using custom AI software.Memo Akten, CC BY-SA

In 2022, an AI-generated work of art won the Colorado State Fair’s art competition. The artist, Jason Allen, had used Midjourney – a generative AI system trained on art scraped from the internet – to...

Read more: Generative AI is a minefield for copyright law

More Articles ...

  1. Jewish denominations: A brief guide for the perplexed
  2. Russians are using age-old military tactic of flooding to combat Ukraine’s counteroffensive
  3. Despite threats of violence, Trump's federal indictment happened with little fanfare -- but that doesn't mean the far-right movement is fading, an extremism scholar explains
  4. How the Unabomber's unique linguistic fingerprints led to his capture
  5. 96.4% of Americans had COVID-19 antibodies in their blood by fall 2022
  6. When homes flood, who retreats and to where? We mapped thousands of FEMA buyouts and found distance and race play a role
  7. EU files antitrust charges against Google – here's how the ad tech at the heart of the case works
  8. Why the Federal Reserve's epic fight against inflation might be over
  9. Seeing dead fruit flies is bad for the health of fruit flies – and neuroscientists have identified the exact brain cells responsible
  10. Silvio Berlusconi had a complex relationship with US presidents: Friend to one, shunned by another
  11. In the year since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade and ruled states should decide the legality of abortion, voters at the state level have been doing just that: 4 essential reads
  12. Linguists have identified a new English dialect that's emerging in South Florida
  13. If humans went extinct, what would the Earth look like one year later?
  14. Are you part robot? A linguistic anthropologist explains how humans are like ChatGPT – both recycle language
  15. 'If you want to die in jail, keep talking' – two national security law experts discuss the special treatment for Trump and offer him some advice
  16. Trump indictment unsealed – a criminal law scholar explains what the charges mean, and what prosecutors will now need to prove
  17. Trump charged under Espionage Act – which covers a lot more crimes than just spying
  18. 6 books that explain the history and meaning of Juneteenth
  19. Supreme Court rules in favor of Black voters in Alabama and protects landmark Voting Rights Act
  20. The US has a child labor problem – recalling an embarrassing past that Americans may think they've left behind
  21. 'From Magic Mushrooms to Big Pharma' – a college course explores nature's medicine cabinet and different ways of healing
  22. Never mind Cleopatra – what about the forgotten queens of ancient Nubia?
  23. Drawing, making music and writing poetry can support healing and bring more humanity to health care in US hospitals
  24. Millions of women are working during menopause, but US law isn't clear on employees' rights or employers' obligations
  25. El Niño is back – that's good news or bad news, depending on where you live
  26. Do federal or state prosecutors get to go first in trying Trump? A law professor untangles the conflict
  27. Pat Robertson's lasting influence on American politics: 3 essential reads
  28. Overcrowded trains serve as metaphor for India in Western eyes – but they are a relic of colonialism and capitalism
  29. Why a federal judge found Tennessee’s anti-drag law unconstitutional
  30. Four strategies to make your neighborhood safer
  31. Title 42 didn't result in a surge of migration, after all – but border communities are still facing record-breaking migration
  32. Republicans' anti-ESG attack may be silencing insurers, but it isn’t changing their pro-climate business decisions
  33. WHO's recommendation against the use of artificial sweeteners for weight loss leaves many questions unanswered
  34. Will faster federal reviews speed up the clean energy shift? Two legal scholars explain what the National Environmental Policy Act does and doesn't do
  35. Astrud Gilberto spread bossa nova to a welcoming world – but got little love back in Brazil
  36. What is incorruptibility? A scholar of Catholic worship explains
  37. Arrests of 3 members of an Atlanta charity's board in a SWAT-team raid is highly unusual and could be unconstitutional
  38. Cost and lack of majors are among the top reasons why students leave for-profit colleges
  39. Messi is heading to the US as Saudi Arabia kicks off bidding war with MLS for aging soccer stars
  40. Oklahoma OKs the nation's first religious charter school – but litigation is likely to follow
  41. Kakhovka dam breach raises risk for Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant – receding waters narrow options for cooling
  42. Forts Cavazos, Barfoot and Liberty — new names for army bases honor new heroes and lasting values, instead of Confederates who lost a war
  43. Brain tumors are cognitive parasites – how brain cancer hijacks neural circuits and causes cognitive decline
  44. Mounting research documents the harmful effects of social media use on mental health, including body image and development of eating disorders
  45. Mike Pence is jockeying against Donald Trump for the Republican presidential nomination – joining the ranks of just one vice president who, in 1800, also ran against a former boss
  46. The ugly side of beauty: Chemicals in cosmetics threaten college-age women's reproductive health
  47. Why insurance companies are pulling out of California and Florida, and how to fix some of the underlying problems
  48. Aztec and Maya civilizations are household names – but it's the Olmecs who are the 'mother culture' of ancient Mesoamerica
  49. This course studies NGOs aiming to help countries recover from mass atrocities and to prevent future violence
  50. Peaches are a minor part of Georgia's economy, but they're central to its mythology