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Africa's 2 elephant species are both endangered, due to poaching and habitat loss

  • Written by George Wittemyer, Associate professor of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology, Colorado State University
imageAn African forest elephant (_Loxodonta cyclotis_) in Odzala-Kokoua National Park, Republic of the Congo.Nicolas Deloche/Godong/Universal Images Group via Getty ImagesimageCC BY-ND

Humans have been over-exploiting African elephants for centuries. More than 2,000 years ago, the Roman Empire’s demand for ivory led to the extinction of genetically...

Read more: Africa's 2 elephant species are both endangered, due to poaching and habitat loss

Two stereotypes that diminish the humanity of the Atlanta shooting victims – and all Asian Americans

  • Written by Angie Chuang, Associate Professor of Journalism, University of Colorado Boulder
imageA rally against violence toward Asian Americans, after the March 16 attack in Atlanta, Georgia, that killed eight people, including six Chinese and Korean women. Alexi Rosenfeld/Getty Images

Since the Atlanta spa shootings, the U.S. media has been working harder than usual to describe and understand Asian Americans.

Asian Americans represent a...

Read more: Two stereotypes that diminish the humanity of the Atlanta shooting victims – and all Asian Americans

¿Por qué estar en casa y no en cafés y bares está 'desgastando' nuestra creatividad?

  • Written by Korydon Smith, Professor of Architecture and Co-Founder of Global Health Equity, University at Buffalo
imageCada breve encuentro social planta una pequeña semilla que puede convertirse en una nueva idea o inspiración.Hulton Archive/Stringer via Getty Images

Si bien la pandemia ha provocado que miles de pequeñas empresas cierren temporalmente o para siempre, la desaparición de la cafetería de la esquina significa...

Read more: ¿Por qué estar en casa y no en cafés y bares está 'desgastando' nuestra creatividad?

Ending testing for New York City's gifted program may be another blow to Black and Latino students

  • Written by Joni Lakin, Associate Professor of Educational Studies, University of Alabama
imageNew York City public school students attend a meeting with school board officials in January 2020.Andrew Lichtenstein/Corbis via Getty Images

After years of relying on a single controversial test at age 4 for admission to their gifted programs, New York City schools are about to embark upon a new way to identify gifted students.

The city’s...

Read more: Ending testing for New York City's gifted program may be another blow to Black and Latino students

Montenegro was a success story in troubled Balkan region – now its democracy is in danger

  • Written by Marc L. Greenberg, Professor of Slavic Languages & Literatures, University of Kansas
imageCelebrating Montenegrin independence on May 21, 2006. Diminar Dilkoff/AFP via Getty Images

Tiny Montenegro has long been different from its neighbors in the former Yugoslavia.

After a decade of bloody civil wars that included ethnic cleansing and acts of genocide, Yugoslavia in the 1990s split violently along ethnic lines into six different...

Read more: Montenegro was a success story in troubled Balkan region – now its democracy is in danger

Service dogs can help veterans with PTSD – growing evidence shows they may reduce anxiety in practical ways

  • Written by Leanne Nieforth, Ph.D. Student, Purdue University
imageTraining for service dogs starts very early.AP Photo/Allen G. Breed

As many as 1 in 5 of the roughly 2.7 million Americans deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan since 2001 are experiencing post-traumatic stress disorder.

PTSD, a mental health problem that some people develop after experiencing or witnessing a life-threatening traumatic event, is a...

Read more: Service dogs can help veterans with PTSD – growing evidence shows they may reduce anxiety in...

Mass shootings leave emotional and mental scars on survivors, first responders and millions of others

  • Written by Arash Javanbakht, Associate Professor of Psychiatry, Wayne State University
imagePolice officers after the March 22 deadly shootings in Boulder, Colorado. AAron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post

The deadly shootings of eight people in Atlanta on March 16 and 10 people in Boulder, Colorado, on March 22 brought heartache and grief to the families and friends of the victims.

These events also take a toll on others, including those who...

Read more: Mass shootings leave emotional and mental scars on survivors, first responders and millions of...

Domestic air travel does not appear to have been an important vector for the spread of COVID-19 in the US, study suggests

  • Written by Jeff Prince, Professor and Chair of Business Economics and Public Policy, Indiana University
imagePassengers board a plane in New York City on May 3, 2020. Air travel from such hot spots did not lead to surges to other cities, a study suggests.Eleonore Sens/AFP via Getty Images)

Fear of flying and catching COVID-19 led to a massive decline in air travel in 2020. But an interesting question emerges: How much did air travel contribute to the...

Read more: Domestic air travel does not appear to have been an important vector for the spread of COVID-19 in...

Farming fish in fresh water is more affordable and sustainable than in the ocean

  • Written by Ben Belton, Associate Professor of International Development, Michigan State University
imageJeremiah Kiarie rounds up tilapia at Green Algae Highland fish farm in central Kenya on April 29, 2017.Tony Karumba/AFP via Getty Images

A tidal wave of interest is building in farming the seas. It’s part of a global rush to exploit oceanic resources that’s been dubbed the “blue acceleration.”

Optimistic projections say that...

Read more: Farming fish in fresh water is more affordable and sustainable than in the ocean

How humans became the best throwers on the planet

  • Written by Michael P. Lombardo, Professor of Biology, Grand Valley State University
imageNew York Yankees closer Aroldis Chapman routinely tops 100 mph with his fastball.Jim McIsaac/Getty Images Sport via Getty Images

Pitchers’ fastballs are getting better and better.

From 2008 to 2020, the average speeds of all major league baseball pitches combined rose by between 1.5 mph and 2 mph. In the 2019 season, nearly 90% of the 281...

Read more: How humans became the best throwers on the planet

More Articles ...

  1. Activists, state authorities and lawsuits filed by survivors are putting pressure on the 'troubled teens' industry to change its ways
  2. Gun control fails quickly in Congress after each mass shooting, but states often act – including to loosen gun laws
  3. Many QAnon followers report having mental health diagnoses
  4. Why corporate climate pledges of ‘net-zero’ emissions should trigger a healthy dose of skepticism
  5. Culture matters a lot in successfully managing a pandemic - and many countries that did well had one thing in common
  6. Why you should get a COVID-19 vaccine – even if you've already had the coronavirus
  7. Who gets Cherokee citizenship has long been a struggle between the tribe and the US government
  8. Robinhood app makes Wall Street feel like a game to win – instead of a place where you can lose your life savings in a New York minute
  9. What the American Rescue Plan says about President Biden’s health care priorities – and what they mean for you
  10. This Passover, as in the past, will be a time to recognize tragedies and offer hope for the future
  11. Civics education isn't boosting youth voting or volunteerism
  12. The US has never had much of a pilgrimage tradition – perhaps now is the opportunity
  13. When can kids get the COVID-19 vaccine? A pediatrician answers 5 questions parents are asking
  14. US museums hold the remains of thousands of Black people
  15. Raising the minimum wage is a health issue, too
  16. Meisha Porter is the first Black woman chancellor of NYC schools – here are the challenges she will face
  17. Unequal treatment for college women's basketball players has deep historical roots
  18. How to improve public health, the environment and racial equity all at once: Upgrade low-income housing
  19. Living with a disability is very expensive – even with government assistance
  20. Purity culture and the subjugation of women: Southern Baptist beliefs on sex and gender provide context to spa suspect's 'motive'
  21. People gave up on flu pandemic measures a century ago when they tired of them – and paid a price
  22. Privacy may be under threat, but its protection alone isn’t enough to preserve civil liberties
  23. Chivalry is not about opening doors, but protecting society's most vulnerable from attack
  24. Vaccination passport apps could help society reopen – first they have to be secure, private and trusted
  25. How good is the AstraZeneca vaccine – and is it really safe? 5 questions answered
  26. Citizenship for the 'Dreamers'? 6 essential reads on DACA and immigration reform
  27. So-called 'good' suburban schools often require trade-offs for Latino students
  28. US has a long history of violence against Asian women
  29. Why can't the IRS just send Americans a refund – or a bill?
  30. Your brain thinks – but how?
  31. Biden immigration overhaul would reunite families split up by deportation
  32. To help insects, make them welcome in your garden – here's how
  33. Why Christianity put away its dancing shoes – only to find them again centuries later
  34. Jocks and frat boys more likely than other men in college to visit 'slut pages' and post nude images without consent
  35. Why Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month is really something to celebrate this year
  36. 'Sex addiction' isn't a justification for killing, or really an addiction – it reflects a person's own moral misgivings about sex
  37. What is a hate crime? The narrow legal definition makes it hard to charge and convict
  38. 6 tratamientos que reciben pacientes COVID para sobrevivir, de anticuerpos a remdesivir
  39. Racism is behind anti-Asian American violence, even when it's not a hate crime
  40. 4 reasons no president should want to give a press conference
  41. 'Doing nothing' is all the rage – is it a form of resistance, or just an indulgence for the lucky few?
  42. Police and civilians disagree on when body camera footage should be made public
  43. The pandemic recession has pushed a further 9.8 million Americans into food insecurity
  44. Context influences the decisions you make – whether you're a homebuyer, a juror or a physician
  45. How effective is the first shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine?
  46. Closed borders, travel bans and halted immigration: 5 ways COVID-19 changed how – and where – people move around the world
  47. 3 ways employers could help fight vaccine skepticism
  48. Losing cultural context in emergency communication can be a matter of life and death
  49. Jesus, Paul and the border debate – why cherry-picking Bible passages misses the immigrant experience in ancient Rome
  50. Catholic opinions on Johnson Johnson vaccine highlight debate between hardliners on abortion and others in the church