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Paying people to get vaccinated might work – but is it ethical?

  • Written by Christopher Robertson, Professor of Law, Boston University
imageA shot and a small fortune could entice some to get vaccinated.skodonnell/Getty Images

A financial shot in the arm could be just what is needed for Americans unsure about vaccination.

On May 12, 2021, the Republican governor of Ohio, Mike DeWine, announced five US$1 million lottery prizes for those who are vaccinated. Meanwhile, in West Virginia,...

Read more: Paying people to get vaccinated might work – but is it ethical?

Roe v. Wade gave American women a choice about having children – here's how that changed their lives

  • Written by Constance Shehan, Professor of Sociology and Women's Studies, University of Florida
imageThe U.S. Supreme Court will hear a Mississippi abortion case that challenges Roe v. Wade. Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case challenging a Mississippi state law that bans most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, much earlier than the 24-week threshold generally established by the pivotal abortion rights case Roe...

Read more: Roe v. Wade gave American women a choice about having children – here's how that changed their lives

Prom send-offs celebrate Black girls and their communities

  • Written by Aja D. Reynolds, Assistant Professor of Education, Wayne State University
imageTonayvia Turner, 18, celebrating 2020 prom send-off in the backyard as her younger sister, Cece, fixes the train on her gown.Jovan Garvi

Danielle Nolen sat in her living room, looking glamorous in a baby blue robe and trying to preserve her new regal hairstyle as her family decorated the backyard in black and gold in anticipation of her grand...

Read more: Prom send-offs celebrate Black girls and their communities

Pregnancy during COVID-19 lockdown: How the pandemic has affected new mothers

  • Written by Darby Saxbe, Associate Professor of Psychology, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageIsolation and other pandemic stresses can harm pregnant women's mental health, with effects on their babies too.Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post via Getty Images

For the millions of women who celebrated their first Mother’s Day in May 2021, their transition into motherhood occurred in the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Preparing for...

Read more: Pregnancy during COVID-19 lockdown: How the pandemic has affected new mothers

Atlantic hurricane season starts June 1 – here's what forecasters are watching right now

  • Written by Kristopher Karnauskas, Associate Professor of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences and Fellow of the Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences, University of Colorado Boulder
imageHurricanes Katia, Irma and Jose on Sept. 8, 2017.NOAA

As summer in the Northern Hemisphere approaches, forecasters begin watching every bout of rainy weather between the Gulf of Mexico and Africa. Each counterclockwise swirl of wind or burst of puffy clouds there has the potential to organize into a life-threatening tropical storm.

About half of the...

Read more: Atlantic hurricane season starts June 1 – here's what forecasters are watching right now

Both Israel and Hamas are aiming to look strong, instead of finding a way out of their endless war

  • Written by Boaz Atzili, Associate Professor of International Relations, American University School of International Service
imageOn the left, fire and smoke rise above buildings in Gaza City as Israeli warplanes target the Palestinian enclave on May 17, 2021; on the right, rockets launched from Gaza flying toward Israel on May 10, 2021.Mahmud Hams / AFP/Getty Images and Mahmoud Issa/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images.

Israel and Hamas are locked in ever-escalating...

Read more: Both Israel and Hamas are aiming to look strong, instead of finding a way out of their endless war

Striking a balance between fairness in competition and the rights of transgender athletes

  • Written by Chris W. Surprenant, Professor of Ethics, Strategy, and Public Policy, University of New Orleans
imageFew Americans would care about how to best accommodate transgender athletes if they weren't winning events.J_art via Getty Images

In a majority of U.S. states, bills aiming to restrict who can compete in women’s sports at public institutions have either been signed into law or are working their way through state legislatures.

Caught up in...

Read more: Striking a balance between fairness in competition and the rights of transgender athletes

Racial groups suffer disparate consequences after unfair police treatment – but not the groups you might think

  • Written by Christopher R. Dennison, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University at Buffalo
imageSeattle police officers deploy pepper spray as they clash with protesters in Seattle, Washington, on July 25, 2020.Jason Redmond/AFP via Getty Images

George Floyd’s high-profile death has become synonymous with unfair police treatment.

His death has sparked discussions surrounding police reform and the long-term consequences for people who...

Read more: Racial groups suffer disparate consequences after unfair police treatment – but not the groups you...

World's worst pandemic leaders: 5 presidents and prime ministers who badly mishandled COVID-19

  • Written by Sumit Ganguly, Distinguished Professor of Political Science and the Tagore Chair in Indian Cultures and Civilizations, Indiana University
imageBelarus President Alexander Lukashenko visits a hospital for COVID-19 patients, unmasked, in Minsk on Nov. 27, 2020. Andrei Stasevich\TASS via Getty Images

COVID-19 is notoriously hard to control, and political leaders are only part of the calculus when it comes to pandemic management. But some current and former world leaders have made little...

Read more: World's worst pandemic leaders: 5 presidents and prime ministers who badly mishandled COVID-19

The truth about tooth decay

  • Written by Jeffrey Ebersole, Professor of Biomedical Sciences, University of Nevada, Las Vegas
imageThe health of your teeth has a major effect on your body.Rudy Fargo/Unsplash, CC BY

To “cry poor mouth” is an expression used to habitually complain about a lack of money. A literal poor mouth, however, represents one of the most widespread global diseases: tooth decay. Cavities resulting from poor oral health can drive everything from e...

Read more: The truth about tooth decay

More Articles ...

  1. How to use statistics to prepare for the next pandemic
  2. Engineers and economists prize efficiency, but nature favors resilience – lessons from Texas, COVID-19 and the 737 Max
  3. Muslim women are using Sharia to push for gender equality
  4. The typical child care worker in the US earns less than $12 an hour
  5. Antarctica is headed for a climate tipping point by 2060, with catastrophic melting if carbon emissions aren't cut quickly
  6. HIV/AIDS vaccine: Why don't we have one after 37 years, when we have several for COVID-19 after a few months?
  7. Beer, doughnuts and a $1 million lottery – how vaccine incentives and other behavioral tools can help the US reach herd immunity
  8. 'What's Going On' at 50 – Marvin Gaye's Motown classic is as relevant today as it was in 1971
  9. Why I use the NRA as a case study for how nonprofits shouldn't operate
  10. Sex work, part of the online gig economy, is a lifeline for marginalized workers
  11. Lack of sleep is harming health care workers – and their patients
  12. Ultra-Orthodox Jewish women are bucking the patriarchal, authoritarian stereotype of their community
  13. Why do we hate the sound of our own voices?
  14. How student-designed video games made me rethink how I teach history
  15. How much energy can people create at one time without losing control?
  16. If a satellite falls on your house, space law protects you – but there are no legal penalties for leaving junk in orbit
  17. As the Palestinian minority takes to the streets, Israel is having its own Black Lives Matter moment
  18. Halston: The glittering rise – and spectacular fall – of a fashion icon
  19. Why genocide survivors can offer a way to heal from the trauma of the pandemic year
  20. New teachers face complex cultural challenges – the stories of 3 Latina teachers in their toughest moments
  21. Using captured CO₂ in everyday products could help fight climate change, but will consumers want them?
  22. To navigate the dangers of the web, you need critical thinking – but also critical ignoring
  23. Herd immunity appears unlikely for COVID-19, but CDC says vaccinated people can ditch masks in most settings
  24. Microfluidics: The tiny, beautiful tech hidden all around you
  25. Should my child get the COVID-19 vaccine? 7 questions answered by a pediatric infectious disease expert
  26. Why the inflation rate doesn’t tell the whole story – all it takes is a spike in a category like used cars to cause consumer prices to soar
  27. Another dangerous fire season is looming in the Western U.S., and the drought-stricken region is headed for a water crisis
  28. Apple threatens to upend podcasting's free, open architecture
  29. Free speech wasn't so free 103 years ago, when 'seditious' and 'unpatriotic' speech was criminalized in the US
  30. Refugee camps can wreak enormous environmental damages – should source countries be liable for them?
  31. Scientists at work: Helping endangered sea turtles, one emergency surgery at a time
  32. Why is the FDA funded in part by the companies it regulates?
  33. Protests by Palestinian citizens in Israel signal growing sense of a common struggle
  34. Faith in numbers: Is church attendance linked to higher rates of coronavirus?
  35. Here’s how much your personal information is worth to cybercriminals – and what they do with it
  36. Why the Al-Aqsa Mosque has often been a site of conflict
  37. Judge rejects NRA's bankruptcy bid, allowing New York's lawsuit against the gun group to proceed: 5 questions answered
  38. Teeth of fallen soldiers hold evidence that foreigners fought alongside ancient Greeks, challenging millennia of military history
  39. What American farmers could gain by rejoining the Asia-Pacific trade deal that Trump spurned
  40. Pregnant women's brains show troubling signs of stress – but feeling strong social support can break those patterns
  41. President Biden's plan for free universal preschool – 5 questions answered
  42. Agnolotti, bucatini and the innovative new 'cascatelli' – a brief history of pasta shapes
  43. How America’s partisan divide over pandemic responses played out in the states
  44. Domestic violence isn't about just physical violence – and state laws are beginning to recognize that
  45. Myanmar's anti-coup protesters defy rigid gender roles – and subvert stereotypes about women to their advantage
  46. US approves its first big offshore wind farm, near Martha's Vineyard – it’s a breakthrough for the industry
  47. I spent a year and a half at a 'no-excuses' charter school – this is what I saw
  48. How do I talk to my child about violence? 4 essential reads
  49. How the Texas Top 10% Plan failed to attract more students to the state's flagship colleges
  50. Robert Owen, born 250 years ago, tried to use his wealth to perfect humanity in a radically equal society