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At a small liberal arts college, Black students learned to become 'bicultural' to succeed and get jobs – but stress followed

  • Written by Elizabeth Aries, Professor of Psychology, Amherst College
imageBlack students reported stress as a result of trying to downplay their cultural identities. Halfpoint Images

In her forthcoming book, “The Impact of College Diversity: Struggles and Successes at Age 30,” Amherst College psychology professor Elizabeth Aries discovered a disturbing dual reality for Black students going to the small,...

Read more: At a small liberal arts college, Black students learned to become 'bicultural' to succeed and get...

Why can't Americans agree on, well, nearly anything? Philosophy has some answers

  • Written by James Steiner-Dillon, Associate Professor of Law, University of Dayton
imageSocial media has made yelling past each other all the easier.We Are/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Does wearing a mask stop the spread of COVID-19? Is climate change driven primarily by human-made emissions? With these kinds of issues dividing the public, it sometimes feels as if Americans are losing our ability to agree about basic facts of the...

Read more: Why can't Americans agree on, well, nearly anything? Philosophy has some answers

Understanding mass incarceration in the US is the first step to reducing a swollen prison population

  • Written by Jeffrey Bellin, Mills E. Godwin, Jr., Professor of Law, William & Mary Law School
imagePeople incarcerated at a county jail in North Dakota gather together. Andrew Burton/Getty Images

The incarceration rate in the United States fell in 2021 to its lowest levels since 1995 – but the U.S. continues to imprison a higher percentage of its population than almost every other country.

The U.S. incarcerates 530 people for every 100,000...

Read more: Understanding mass incarceration in the US is the first step to reducing a swollen prison population

I've spent 5 years researching the heroic life of Black musician Graham Jackson, but teaching his story could be illegal under laws in Florida and North Dakota

  • Written by David Cason, Associate Professor in Honors, University of North Dakota
imageChief Petty Officer Graham Jackson mourns the death of Franklin Delano Roosevelt on April 13, 1945. Edward Clark/Life Magazine

The story of Graham Jackson is a timeless tale of American ingenuity, hard work and the cream rising to the top.

It’s also a tale of economic inequality, overt racism and America’s Jim Crow caste system.

As one of...

Read more: I've spent 5 years researching the heroic life of Black musician Graham Jackson, but teaching his...

Sibling aggression and abuse go beyond rivalry – bullying within a family can have lifelong repercussions

  • Written by Corinna Jenkins Tucker, Senior Project Director, Sibling Aggression and Abuse Research and Advocacy Initiative (SAARA) at the Crimes Against Children Center, University of New Hampshire
imageHurting a sibling is not the same thing as healthy rivalry.Glasshouse Images/The Image Bank via Getty Images

Nearly 80% of U.S. children grow up with a sibling. For many, brothers and sisters are life companions, close confidants and sharers of memories. But siblings also are natural competitors for parents’ attention. When brothers and...

Read more: Sibling aggression and abuse go beyond rivalry – bullying within a family can have lifelong...

Student debt cancellation program in jeopardy as Supreme Court justices hear arguments

  • Written by John Patrick Hunt, Professor of Law, University of California, Davis
imageThe estimated cost of President Biden's student loan cancellation program is $430 billion.Douglas Rissing via Getty Images

The U.S. Supreme Court heard oral arguments on Feb. 28, 2023, regarding a multistate lawsuit to block the Biden administration’s student loan debt cancellation program. The Conversation asked John Patrick Hunt, a law...

Read more: Student debt cancellation program in jeopardy as Supreme Court justices hear arguments

Mocking the police got an Ohio man arrested – and the Supreme Court ignored The Onion's plea to define the limits of parody

  • Written by Jane E. Kirtley, Professor of Media Ethics and Law, University of Minnesota
imageSatire can be dangerous.DigitalVision Vectors/Getty Images

Can Americans be jailed for making fun of the government? Most would respond with a resounding “No, of course not! The First Amendment protects us from that.”

But Anthony Novak learned otherwise in March 2016, after he created and posted a fake version of the Parma, Ohio, Police...

Read more: Mocking the police got an Ohio man arrested – and the Supreme Court ignored The Onion's plea to...

Which state you live in matters for how well environmental laws protect your health

  • Written by Susan Kaplan, Research Assistant Professor of Public Health, University of Illinois at Chicago
imagePesticide use on school playing fields varies from state to state. matimix/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Your child could go to gym class on Monday morning and play soccer on a field that was sprayed over the weekend with 2,4-D, a toxic weedkiller that has been investigated as possibly causing cancer. Alternatively, the school grounds may have been...

Read more: Which state you live in matters for how well environmental laws protect your health

Why the pronouns used for God matter

  • Written by Annie Selak, Associate Director, Women's Center, Georgetown University
imageA service in the village church of St. Paul de Leon in Devon, England. Hugh R Hastings/Getty Images

The Church of England is considering what language and pronouns should be used to refer to God.

The church’s General Synod has, however, clarified that it will not abolish or substantially revise any of the currently authorized liturgies....

Read more: Why the pronouns used for God matter

More Articles ...

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  5. 3 big numbers that tell the story of secularization in America
  6. All presidents avoid reporters, but Biden may achieve a record in his press avoidance
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  10. What is spillover? Bird flu outbreak underscores need for early detection to prevent the next big pandemic
  11. The looming stalemate in Ukraine one year after the Russian invasion
  12. All wars eventually end – here are 3 situations that will lead Russia and Ukraine to make peace
  13. Why are so many Gen Z-ers drawn to old digital cameras?
  14. Project Veritas fired James O'Keefe over fear of losing its nonprofit status – 5 questions answered
  15. Runoff vote count starts in historic UAW election – it's already bringing profound union leadership changes and chances of more strikes and higher car prices
  16. I assisted Carter’s work encouraging democracy – and saw how his experience, persistence and engineer’s mindset helped build a freer Latin America over decades
  17. Mac McClung may have 'saved' the slam dunk contest, but scoring methods could still be improved, a dunkologist explains
  18. Biden's border crackdown explained – a refugee law expert looks at the legality and impact of new asylum rule
  19. $1 trillion in the shade – the annual profits multinational corporations shift to tax havens continues to climb and climb
  20. Los policías negros no son neutrales: padecen los mismos prejuicios antinegros que la sociedad estadounidense y la policía en general
  21. Novelist, academic and tattoo artist Samuel Steward's plight shows that 'cancel culture' was alive and well in the 1930s
  22. How to help teen girls’ mental health struggles – 6 research-based strategies for parents, teachers and friends
  23. When there are no words: Talking about wartime trauma in Ukraine
  24. What's going on with the wave of GOP bills about trans teens? Utah provides clues
  25. Imagination makes us human – this unique ability to envision what doesn't exist has a long evolutionary history
  26. Supreme Court unlikely to 'break the internet' over Google, Twitter cases -- rather, it is approaching with caution
  27. Night skies are getting 9.6% brighter every year as light pollution erases stars for everyone
  28. Sage, sacred to Native Americans, is being used in purification rituals, raising issues of cultural appropriation
  29. Violent extremists are not lone wolves – dispelling this myth could help reduce violence
  30. Drones over Ukraine: What the war means for the future of remotely piloted aircraft in combat
  31. In rural America, right-to-repair laws are the leading edge of a pushback against growing corporate power
  32. How frontotemporal dementia, the syndrome affecting Bruce Willis, changes the brain – research is untangling its genetic causes
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  38. How fitness influencers game the algorithms to pump up their engagement
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