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Russia announces its suspension from last nuclear arms agreement with the US, escalating nuclear tension

  • Written by Nina Srinivasan Rathbun, Professor of International Relations, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageA woman in Crimea watches a TV broadcast of Russian President Vladimir Putin's speech on Feb. 21, 2023. Stringer/AFP via Getty Images

After decades of progress on limiting the buildup of nuclear weapons, Russia’s war on Ukraine has prompted renewed nuclear tensions between Russia and the United States.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said in...

Read more: Russia announces its suspension from last nuclear arms agreement with the US, escalating nuclear...

How Putin has shrugged off unprecedented economic sanctions over Russia's war in Ukraine – for now

  • Written by Peter Rutland, Professor of Government, Wesleyan University
imagePutin has survived with a little help from his friends. Alexei Druzhinin, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

The U.S. and four dozen other countries have imposed punishing sanctions on Russia in reaction to its invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022. The sanctions were unprecedented in their scope and severity for an economy of Russia’s size.

The...

Read more: How Putin has shrugged off unprecedented economic sanctions over Russia's war in Ukraine – for now

I am a Ukrainian American political scientist, and this is what the past year of war has taught me about Ukraine, Russia and defiance

  • Written by Lena Surzhko Harned, Associate Teaching Professor of Political Science, Penn State
imageRussian President Putin thought he would overrun Ukraine in a few days. These military volunteers and fellow Ukrainians 'had other ideas,' writes the author.Mykhaylo Palinchak/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

Over 8 million Ukrainians have fled their homeland during this past year of war since Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine....

Read more: I am a Ukrainian American political scientist, and this is what the past year of war has taught me...

Florida will no longer ask high school athletes about their menstrual cycles, but many states still do – here are 3 reasons why that's problematic

  • Written by Lindsey Darvin, Assistant Professor of Sport Management, Syracuse University
imageIf female athletes have to answer menstruation-related questions in order to play team sports, that could be a form of sex-based discrimination. AAron Ontiveroz/MediaNews Group/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Concerns are being raised across the U.S. about whether schools have a right to compel female athletes to provide information about their...

Read more: Florida will no longer ask high school athletes about their menstrual cycles, but many states...

Ukrainians' commitment to fight off Russia grows stronger, as does their expectation of victory, as war enters second year

  • Written by Tatsiana Kulakevich, Assistant Professor of Instruction at School of Interdisciplinary Global Studies, Affiliate Professor at the Institute for Russian, European, and Eurasian Studies, University of South Florida
imageA Ukrainian boy stands on top of a deserted Russian military vehicle in Kyiv in August 2022. Alexey Furman/Getty Images

United States intelligence experts expected Russian troops to quickly overtake Kyiv shortly after Russia launched a full-fledged invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022.

But Ukraine continues to control Kyiv and the majority of its...

Read more: Ukrainians' commitment to fight off Russia grows stronger, as does their expectation of victory,...

War in Ukraine accelerates global drive toward killer robots

  • Written by James Dawes, Professor of English, Macalester College
imageIt wouldn't take much to turn this remotely operated mobile machine gun into an autonomous killer robot.Pfc. Rhita Daniel, U.S. Marine Corps

The U.S. military is intensifying its commitment to the development and use of autonomous weapons, as confirmed by an update to a Department of Defense directive. The update, released Jan. 25, 2023, is the...

Read more: War in Ukraine accelerates global drive toward killer robots

Russia’s aggression threatens efforts to protect nature beyond Ukraine

  • Written by Eduardo Gallo-Cajiao, David H. Smith Conservation Research Postdoctoral Fellow, University of Washington
imageRed-breasted geese breed mainly on Russia’s Taymyr Peninsula and migrate to areas adjacent to the Black Sea in Ukraine, Romania and Bulgaria. Daniel Mitev, CC BY-ND

The Russian invasion of Ukraine launched in February 2022 has sent economic, social and political shock waves around the world. In a newly published policy brief, we and other...

Read more: Russia’s aggression threatens efforts to protect nature beyond Ukraine

Train derailments get more headlines, but truck crashes involving hazardous chemicals are more frequent and deadly in US

  • Written by Michael F. Gorman, Professor of Business Analytics and Operations Management, University of Dayton
imageA trooper checks the tire of a truck carrying flammable contents during a random hazmat checkpoint in Colorado.Andy Cross/The Denver Post via Getty Images

Less than two weeks after train cars filled with hazardous chemicals derailed in Ohio and caught fire, a truck carrying nitric acid crashed on a major highway outside Tucson, Arizona, killing the...

Read more: Train derailments get more headlines, but truck crashes involving hazardous chemicals are more...

The ethics of home ownership in an age of growing inequality

  • Written by Désirée Lim, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, Penn State
imagePurchasing property as a primary home is considered more ethical than acquiring property for investment.Ilya Burdun via Getty Images

For many Americans today, homeownership is an unattainable dream.

In 2022, the average long-term U.S. mortgage rate rose to 7% for the first time in more than two decades. The median sales price of existing homes climb...

Read more: The ethics of home ownership in an age of growing inequality

How apartheid, European racism and Pelé helped cultivate a culture of diversity in US soccer that endures into the MLS

  • Written by John M Sloop, Professor of Communication Studies, Vanderbilt University
imagePatrick 'Ace' Ntsoelengoe in action for the Toronto Blizzard.Tony Bock/Toronto Star via Getty Images

North America’s most diverseprofessional league kicks off on Feb. 25, 2023, as Major League Soccer returns after a winter break.

The league, commonly known as the MLS, has long prided itself as a standard-bearer for racial and national...

Read more: How apartheid, European racism and Pelé helped cultivate a culture of diversity in US soccer that...

More Articles ...

  1. Epigenetic and social factors both predict aging and health – but new research suggests one might be stronger
  2. First ladies from Martha Washington to Jill Biden have gotten outsized attention for their clothing instead of their views
  3. Research on teen social media use has a racial bias – studies of white kids are widely taken to be universal
  4. Were viruses around on Earth before living cells emerged? A microbiologist explains
  5. 3 things the pandemic taught us about inequality in college — and why they matter today
  6. Presidential greatness is rarely fixed in stone – changing attitudes on racial injustice and leadership qualities lead to dramatic shifts
  7. Turkish President Erdoğan's grip on power threatened by devastating earthquake
  8. Do we need political parties? In theory, they're the sort of organization that could bring Americans together in larger purpose
  9. Ukraine war has exposed the folly – and unintended consequences – of 'armed missionaries'
  10. The war in Ukraine hasn't left Europe freezing in the dark, but it has caused energy crises in unexpected places
  11. How far must employers go to accommodate workers' time off for worship? The Supreme Court will weigh in
  12. How vinyl chloride, the chemical in the Ohio train derailment and used to make PVC plastics, can damage your liver
  13. Prisoners donating organs to get time off raises thorny ethical questions
  14. How records of life's milestones help solve cold cases, pinpoint health risks and allocate public resources
  15. Super Bowl car ads sell Americans the idea that new tech will protect them
  16. Michigan State murders: What we know about campus shootings and the gunmen who carry them out
  17. Earthquake in Turkey exposes gap between seismic knowledge and action -- but it is possible to prepare
  18. Donations by top 50 US donors dropped sharply to $16 billion in 2022 – Bill Gates, Elon Musk, Mike Bloomberg and Warren Buffett lead the list of biggest givers
  19. How do blood tests work? Medical laboratory scientists explain the pathway from blood draw to diagnosis and treatment
  20. Five years after Parkland shooting, a school psychologist offers insights on helping students and teachers deal with grief
  21. My art uses plastic recovered from beaches around the world to understand how our consumer society is transforming the ocean
  22. Tribes in Maine left out of Native American resurgence by 40-year-old federal law denying their self-determination
  23. Scandals can end congressional careers – which is why the Office of Congressional Ethics regularly faces attempts to rein it in
  24. Why the love story of Radha and Krishna has been told in Hinduism for centuries
  25. Big Oil's trade group allies outspent clean energy groups by a whopping 27x, with billions in ads and lobbying to keep fossil fuels flowing
  26. Why does the Earth spin?
  27. A less biased way to determine trademark infringement? Asking the brain directly
  28. What a second-century Roman citizen, Lucian, can teach us about diversity and acceptance
  29. Cost of getting sick for older people of color is 25% higher than for white Americans – new research
  30. Studying abroad is poised to make a post-pandemic comeback – here are 5 questions students who plan to study overseas should ask
  31. A new strategy for western states to adapt to long-term drought: Customized water pricing
  32. What to watch for when you are watching the Super Bowl: 5 essential reads
  33. Burt Bacharach mastered the art of the perfect pop song – and that ain't easy
  34. A boon for sports fandom or a looming mental health crisis? 5 essential reads on the effects of legal sports betting
  35. What are stock buybacks? A finance professor explains why President Biden wants to raise the tax on this controversial use of corporate capital
  36. A nagging cough can hang on for weeks or months following a respiratory illness – and there is precious little you can do about it
  37. Use of psychedelics to treat PTSD, OCD, depression and chronic pain – a researcher discusses recent trials, possible risks
  38. Two years after its historic deep freeze, Texas is increasingly vulnerable to cold snaps – and there are more solutions than just building power plants
  39. How video evidence is presented in court can hold sway in cases like the beating death of Tyre Nichols
  40. Why is a love poem full of sex in the Bible? Readers have been struggling with the Song of Songs for 2,000 years
  41. Cancer evolution is mathematical – how random processes and epigenetics can explain why tumor cells shape-shift, metastasize and resist treatments
  42. Patrick Mahomes injury: An ankle surgeon explains what a high ankle sprain is and how it might affect Mahomes in the Super Bowl
  43. Five years after Parkland, school shootings haven't stopped, and kill more people
  44. Lack of diversity in clinical trials is leaving women and patients of color behind and harming the future of medicine – Podcast
  45. Public school enrollment dropped by 1.2M during the pandemic – an expert discusses where the students went and why it matters
  46. CBD is not a cure-all – here's what science says about its real health benefits
  47. Medication abortion could get harder to obtain – or easier: There's a new wave of post-Dobbs lawsuits on abortion pills
  48. Brazil's president visits the White House as he tries to counter rising threats to democracy at home
  49. Data from New Jersey is a warning sign for young sports bettors
  50. New Zealand wants to tax cow burps – here’s why that’s not the best climate solution