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Reckoning with slavery: What a revolt's archives tell us about who owns the past

  • Written by Marjoleine Kars, Associate Professor of History, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageStatue of the Berbice slave revolt leader Kofi in Georgetown, Guyana.David Stanley - Flickr/WikiMedia, CC BY-SA

The consequences of 400 years of the Atlantic slave trade are still felt today. Untangling the power structures and systemic racism that came with slavery is ongoing, with police brutality, memorials to slave owners and reparations forming...

Read more: Reckoning with slavery: What a revolt's archives tell us about who owns the past

James Baker's masterful legal strategies won George W. Bush a contested election – unlike Rudy Giuliani's string of losses

  • Written by Richard Pildes, Professor of Constitutional Law, New York University
imageFormer President George W. Bush, left, with James A. Baker III at the 2018 funeral of George H.W. Bush.AP Pool

With Rudy Giuliani flailing through a series of failed election challenges for the Trump campaign, a superb new political biography provides fresh evidence of just how stark the contrast is between the head of Trump’s legal team and...

Read more: James Baker's masterful legal strategies won George W. Bush a contested election – unlike Rudy...

NCAA amateurism appears immune to COVID-19 – despite tide in public support for paying athletes having turned

  • Written by Chris Knoester, Associate Professor of Sociology, The Ohio State University
imageThe pandemic has laid bare just how few economic rights college athletes possess.AP Photo/Keith Srakocic

Despite the coronavirus pandemic, college sports have mostly chugged along – albeit with cancellations, postponements and pauses in play.

While many college athletes are grateful for the opportunity to compete, the pandemic has laid bare...

Read more: NCAA amateurism appears immune to COVID-19 – despite tide in public support for paying athletes...

Fences have big effects on land and wildlife around the world that are rarely measured

  • Written by Alex McInturff, Postdoctoral Researcher, University of California Santa Barbara
imageAustralia's dingo fences, built to protect livestock from wild dogs, stretch for thousands of kilometers.Marian Deschain/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

What is the most common form of human infrastructure in the world? It may well be the fence. Recent estimates suggest that the total length of all fencing around the globe is 10 times greater than the total...

Read more: Fences have big effects on land and wildlife around the world that are rarely measured

Nonprofits are struggling to do more with less money, but donors and volunteers can help: 5 questions answered

  • Written by Erica Mills Barnhart, Associate Teaching Professor & Director of the Nancy Bell Evans Center on Nonprofits and Philanthropy, University of Washington
imageA volunteer hands out food boxes in Los Angeles before Thanksgiving.Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images

Historically, nonprofits have gotten nearly a third of their charitable donations just during the month of December. In recent years, this flurry of giving has begun on #GivingTuesday, an online campaign that takes place on the first Tuesday after...

Read more: Nonprofits are struggling to do more with less money, but donors and volunteers can help: 5...

Why waiters give Black customers poor service

  • Written by Zachary Brewster, Associate Professor of Sociology, Wayne State University
imageSome people argue the poor service is because of a stereotype that Black people tip less. PavelVinnik/iStock via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

When Black diners get poorer service from wait staff and bartenders than white customers, it’s more likely because of racial bias than the...

Read more: Why waiters give Black customers poor service

The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was a record-breaker, and it's raising more concerns about climate change

  • Written by James H. Ruppert Jr., Assistant Research Professor, Penn State
imageHurricanes Sally and Paulette, Tropical Depression Rene, and Tropical Storms Teddy and Vicky were all active on Sept. 14, 2020.NOAA

It was clear before the 2020 Atlantic hurricane season started that it was going to be busy. Six months later, we’re looking back at a trail of broken records, and the storms may still not be over even though the...

Read more: The 2020 Atlantic hurricane season was a record-breaker, and it's raising more concerns about...

How Taiwan uses Buddhist literature for environmental education

  • Written by Natasha Heller, Associate Professor of Religion, University of Virginia
imageBuddhist literature is used for teaching children about environmental issues in Taiwan.Photo credit should read SAM YEH/AFP via Getty Images

Climate change is one of the biggest challenges that the world faces. A United Nations report has cautioned that greenhouse gas emissions due to human activity are at a record high, “with no signs of...

Read more: How Taiwan uses Buddhist literature for environmental education

Parler is bringing together mainstream conservatives, anti-Semites and white supremacists as the social media platform attracts millions of Trump supporters

  • Written by Alex Newhouse, Research Lead, Center on Terrorism, Extremism, and Counterterrorism, Middlebury Institute of International Studies
imageParler is similar to Twitter but doesn't control or discourage hate speech or calls to violence.OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Image

Since the 2020 U.S. presidential election, Parler has caught on among right-wing politicians and “influencers” – people with large online followings – as a social media platform where they can...

Read more: Parler is bringing together mainstream conservatives, anti-Semites and white supremacists as the...

57 años después del asesinato de Kennedy, las pistas en México se agotan

  • Written by Gonzalo Soltero, Professor of Narrative Analysis, School of Higher Studies, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM)
imageEsta es la supuesta foto de Lee Harvey Oswald que la estación de la CIA en la Ciudad de México envió tras el asesinato de JFK.

La mayoría de las teorías de conspiración que rodean el asesinato del expresidente estadounidense John F. Kennedy han sido refutadas. Kennedy no fue asesinado por un dispositivo de...

Read more: 57 años después del asesinato de Kennedy, las pistas en México se agotan

More Articles ...

  1. 'Constructive arguing' can help keep the peace at your Thanksgiving table
  2. This type of sexual harassment on campus often goes overlooked
  3. Homeless patients with COVID-19 often go back to life on the streets after hospital care, but there's a better way
  4. Will there be a monument to the COVID-19 pandemic?
  5. Janet Yellen and Kamala Harris keep shattering glass ceilings – but global elite boys club remains
  6. Poland's anti-abortion push highlights pandemic risks to democracy
  7. California vetoed ethnic studies requirements for public high school students, but the movement grows
  8. It's not just ABCs – preschool parents worry their kids are missing out on critical social skills during the pandemic
  9. Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is cheaper than Pfizer's and Moderna's and doesn't require supercold temperature
  10. Testing sewage can give school districts, campuses and businesses a heads-up on the spread of COVID-19
  11. How Biden and Kerry could rebuild America's global climate leadership
  12. 'My vote will be Black' – A wave of Afro-Brazilian women ran for office in 2020 but found glass ceiling hard to break
  13. School suspensions don't just unfairly penalize Black students – they lead to lower grades and 'Black flight'
  14. Republicans didn't lose big in 2020 – they held onto statehouses and the power to influence future elections
  15. These at-home exercises can help older people boost their immune system and overall health in the age of COVID-19
  16. Coronavirus vaccines: health experts identify ways to build public trust
  17. Why do older people heal more slowly?
  18. A century ago, James Weldon Johnson became the first Black person to head the NAACP
  19. Kids as young as 3 years old think YouTube is better for learning than other types of video
  20. Muslim schools are allies in France's fight against radicalization – not the cause
  21. Muslims have visualized Prophet Muhammad in words and calligraphic art for centuries
  22. How George Washington used his first Thanksgiving as president to unite a new country
  23. In the 1620s, Plymouth Plantation had its own #MeToo moment
  24. Ocho meses de confinamiento por COVID-19 y contando: ¿Qué podemos hacer cuando estamos aburridos?
  25. Why nursing home aides exposed to COVID-19 aren’t taking sick leave
  26. China beat the coronavirus with science and strong public health measures, not just with authoritarianism
  27. A brief history of Georgia's runoff voting – and its racist roots
  28. Why do tigers have stripes?
  29. Laughing is good for your mind and your body – here's what the research shows
  30. The rise and fall of Tab – after surviving the sweetener scares, the iconic diet soda gets canned
  31. Opportunities to practice real-life philanthropy bring academic benefits
  32. Biden's ambitious energy plan faces headwinds, but can move the US forward
  33. How Joe Biden did so well in Georgia
  34. How Biden might stimulate the sputtering US economy: 4 questions answered
  35. Why Trump's election fraud claims aren't showing up in his lawsuits challenging the results
  36. Rural hospitals are under siege from COVID-19 – here's what doctors are facing, in their own words
  37. Keeping indoor air clean can reduce the chance of spreading coronavirus
  38. Amid a raging pandemic, the US faces a nursing shortage. Can we close the gap?
  39. COVID-19 vaccines were developed in record time – but are these game-changers safe?
  40. Five reasons Trump's challenge of the 2020 election will not lead to civil war
  41. Why it's important to see women as capable ... of terrible atrocities
  42. What's cellular about a cellphone?
  43. Returning the 'three sisters' – corn, beans and squash – to Native American farms nourishes people, land and cultures
  44. Trump invitation to Michigan lawmakers could spark state and federal political crisis
  45. While spending holidays at home, here are a dozen more things you can do to help stop COVID-19
  46. As CDC warns against Thanksgiving travel, here are a dozen more things you can do to help stop COVID-19
  47. JFK conspiracy theory is debunked in Mexico 57 years after Kennedy assassination
  48. 4 tips for college students to avoid procrastinating with their online work
  49. Why face masks belong at your holiday gathering – 7 things you need to know about wearing them
  50. Why face masks belong at your Thanksgiving gathering – 7 things you need to know about wearing them