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President Carter had to balance employers’ demands for foreign workers with pressure to restrict immigration – and so does Trump

  • Written by Gabrielle Clark, Assistant Professor of Political Science and Public Law, California State University, Los Angeles
imageJimmy Carter shakes riders' hands in a Mexican American parade while campaigning in Southern California in 1976.AP Photo

President Donald Trump promised during his three presidential campaigns to deport as many immigrants living in the U.S. without legal authorization as possible.

His second administration got underway less than one month after forme...

Read more: President Carter had to balance employers’ demands for foreign workers with pressure to restrict...

Skin phantoms help researchers improve wearable devices without people wearing them

  • Written by Krittika Goyal, Assistant Professor of Manufacturing and Mechanical Engineering Technology, Rochester Institute of Technology
imageSkin 'phantoms' are an inexpensive alternative to testing on people. Diana Bachu/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Wearable devices have become a big part of modern health care, helping track a patient’s heart rate, stress levels and brain activity. These devices rely on electrodes, sensors that touch the skin to pick up electrical signals from...

Read more: Skin phantoms help researchers improve wearable devices without people wearing them

Almost half of evicted women and families in metro Detroit say they were illegally pushed out of their homes

  • Written by Shawnita Sealy-Jefferson, Associate Professor of Social Epidemiology, The Ohio State University

Every year, 2.7 million households nationwide face a court-ordered eviction filing.

Michigan has one of the highest eviction filing rates in the country, tied with Mississippi. Fourteen percent of all Michiganders who rent homes were threatened with eviction between 2006 and 2016.

Due to historical and contemporary structural racism in the U.S., Bla...

Read more: Almost half of evicted women and families in metro Detroit say they were illegally pushed out of...

‘Aliens’ and ‘animals’ – language of hate used by Trump and others can be part of a violent design

  • Written by Ronald Niezen, Professor of Practice in Sociology, University of San Diego
imageAsylum seekers wait at Catholic Charities in McAllen, Texas, for humanitarian aid on Jan. 18, 2025. Associated Press/Eric Gay

Animals,” “aliens” and “people with bad genes” – President Donald Trump and his supporters often use this kind of dehumanizing language to describe immigrants.

In the 2024...

Read more: ‘Aliens’ and ‘animals’ – language of hate used by Trump and others can be part of a violent design

Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination signals a new era of anti-intellectualism in American politics

  • Written by Dominik Stecuła, Assistant Professor of Communication and Political Science, The Ohio State University
imageDonald Trump's nominee for secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services, Robert Kennedy Jr., on Capitol Hill on Jan. 9, 2025. Jon Cherry/Getty Images

The many controversial people appointed to the Trump administration, from Elon Muskto Robert F. Kennedy Jr., have at least one thing in common: They dislike and distrust experts.

While anti...

Read more: Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s nomination signals a new era of anti-intellectualism in American politics

What’s behind Trump’s flurry of executive action: 4 essential reads on autocrats and authoritarianism

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Politics + Society Editor, The Conversation US
imagePresident Donald Trump shows off one of his new orders upon taking office.Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

If you think a lot is happening in the federal government all at once on a lot of different issues, you’re right.

At the beginning of a new presidential administration, there is often a flurry of changes – new Cabinet appointments and...

Read more: What’s behind Trump’s flurry of executive action: 4 essential reads on autocrats and...

Commerce oversees everything from weather and salmon to trade and census − here are 3 challenges awaiting new secretary

  • Written by Linda J. Bilmes, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Senior Lecturer in Public Policy and Public Finance, Harvard Kennedy School
imageHoward Lutnick, left, is President Donald Trump's nominee to run the Commerce Department.AP Photo/Evan Vucci

The U.S. secretary of commerce oversees the smallest but arguably most complex of all Cabinet-level departments.

Established as a distinct entity in 1913, it has evolved into a sprawling organization with 13 bureaus spanning a wide variety...

Read more: Commerce oversees everything from weather and salmon to trade and census − here are 3 challenges...

¿Trump va en serio con cambiar el nombre del Golfo de México al ‘Golfo de América’? Esto explica una geógrafa

  • Written by Innisfree McKinnon, Associate Professor of Geography, University of Wisconsin-Stout
imageConocido como la Montaña McKinley hasta 2015, el nombre actual de Denali refleja lo que los nativos de Alaska llaman a la montaña. Arterra/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

La orden ejecutiva del presidente Donald Trump de cambiar el nombre del Golfo de México y del Denali de Alaska, el pico más alto del país...

Read more: ¿Trump va en serio con cambiar el nombre del Golfo de México al ‘Golfo de América’? Esto explica...

Engineering the social: Students in this course use systems thinking to help solve human rights, disease and homelessness

  • Written by Raúl Ordóñez, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Dayton
imageAn engineering education can equip students to work on broader social issues. Photosomnia/E+ via Getty Images

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.

Title of course:

Engineering Systems for the Common Good

What prompted the idea for the course?

As a control systems...

Read more: Engineering the social: Students in this course use systems thinking to help solve human rights,...

Medical research depends on government money – even a day’s delay in the intricate funding process throws science off-kilter

  • Written by Aliasger K. Salem, Associate Vice President for Research and Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Iowa
imageOf the tens of thousands of grant applications submitted to the National Institutes of Health, only around 1 in 5 is funded.Sean Gladwell/Moment via Getty Images

In the early days of the second Trump administration, a directive to pause all public communication from the Department of Health and Human Services created uncertainty and anxiety among...

Read more: Medical research depends on government money – even a day’s delay in the intricate funding process...

More Articles ...

  1. In asking Trump to show mercy, Bishop Budde continues a long tradition of Christian leaders ‘speaking truth to power’
  2. St. Thomas Aquinas’ skull just went on tour − here’s what the medieval saint himself would have said about its veneration
  3. Disaster evacuations can take much longer than people expect − computer simulations could help save lives and avoid chaos
  4. Global wildlife trade is an enormous market – a look at the billions of animals the US imports from nearly 30,000 species
  5. Global wildlife trade is an enormous market – the US imports billions of animals from nearly 30,000 species
  6. Donors are down, but dollars are up – how US charitable giving is changing
  7. Canada and Greenland aren’t likely to join the US anytime soon – but ‘GrAmeriCa’ is a revealing thought experiment
  8. Getting mail to your door is just one part of what the postmaster general does
  9. Nutrition advice is rife with misinformation − a medical education specialist explains how to tell valid health information from pseudoscience
  10. Happiness in poorer countries does not follow the typical U-shaped curve − people are often happiest in middle age
  11. Federal threats against local officials who don’t cooperate with immigration orders could be unconstitutional − Justice Antonin Scalia ruled against similar plans
  12. I study democracy worldwide − here’s how Texas is eroding human rights, free expression and civil liberties
  13. Why does it hurt when you get a scrape? A neuroscientist explains the science of pain
  14. How does raw water compare to tap water? A microbiologist explains why the risks outweigh the benefits
  15. Why government can’t make America ‘healthier’ by micromanaging groceries purchased with SNAP benefits
  16. Why Trump’s tariffs can’t solve America’s fentanyl crisis
  17. Assad’s fall opens window for Syrian refugees to head home − but for many, it won’t be an easy decision
  18. ‘Sorry, I didn’t get that’: AI misunderstands some people’s words more than others
  19. Norovirus, aka the winter vomiting bug, is on the rise – an infectious disease expert explains the best ways to stay safe
  20. Understanding paranormal beliefs and conspiracy theories isn’t just about misinformation – this course unpacks the history
  21. College course teaches Philly students to appreciate beer − whether they’re tailgating or fine dining
  22. Can Trump just order new names for Denali and the Gulf of Mexico? A geographer explains who decides what goes on the map
  23. Trump inherits the Guantánamo prison, complete with 4 ‘forever prisoners’
  24. Red light therapy shows promise for pain relief, inflammation and skin conditions – but other claims might be hyped
  25. Newly discovered photos of Nazi deportations show Jewish victims as they were last seen alive
  26. Reproductive health care faces legal and surveillance challenges post-Roe – new research offers guidance
  27. One large Milky Way galaxy or many galaxies? 100 years ago, a young Edwin Hubble settled astronomy’s ‘Great Debate’
  28. US Supreme Court is unabashedly liberal − in its writing style
  29. Seizure of Sally Mann’s photographs in Texas revives old debates about obscenity and freedom of expression
  30. Microgravity in space may cause cancer − but on Earth, mimicking weightlessness could help researchers develop treatments
  31. The technology that runs Congress lags so far behind the modern world that its flag-tracking system just caught up to 2017-era Pizza Hut
  32. President Trump promises to make government efficient − and he’ll run into the same roadblocks as Presidents Taft, Roosevelt, Roosevelt, Truman, Eisenhower, Carter, Reagan, Clinton and Bush, among others
  33. Navigating deepfakes and synthetic media: This course helps students demystify artificial intelligence technologies
  34. As Syria ponders a democratic future: 5 lessons from the Arab Spring
  35. Harvard expands its definition of antisemitism – when does criticism of Israel cross a line?
  36. Health and Human Services secretary influences every aspect of America’s health
  37. Mark Zuckerberg thinks workplaces need to ‘man up’ − here’s why that’s bad for all employees, no matter their gender
  38. 10 years after the Charlie Hebdo attacks in France, conversations about free speech are still too black and white
  39. After the fire: Rain on wildfire burn scars can trigger deadly debris flows – a geologist explains how
  40. LA gets rain, but also risk of flooding and debris flows from wildfire burn scars – a geologist explains the threat
  41. FDA bans Red 3 dye from food and drugs – a scientist explains the artificial color’s health risks and long history
  42. Kremlin promotes ‘traditional values’ – but leaves some battles to the governors
  43. What another Lukashenko ‘victory’ will mean for Europe’s security – and that of Belarus’ citizenry
  44. Meet phosphine, a gas commonly used for industrial fumigation that can damage your lungs, heart and liver
  45. Many more older people are leaving prison and face unmet needs for housing and health care − as well as a tangle of groups trying to help
  46. As Gaza ceasefire takes hold, Israeli forces turn to Jenin – a regular target seen as a center of Palestinian resistance
  47. What is seditious conspiracy, which is among the most serious crimes Trump pardoned?
  48. Ozempic and similar weight loss drugs may lower risk of 42 health conditions, but also pose risks
  49. Warning of ‘oligarchy,’ Biden channels Andrew Jackson
  50. How the oil industry and growing political divides turned climate change into a partisan issue