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Making sex deadly for insects could control pests that carry disease and harm crops

  • Written by Bill Sullivan, Professor of Microbiology and Immunology, Indiana University
imageIn the toxic male technique, genetically engineered male insects would implant semen containing toxic venom into the female insects during mating.Madugrero/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Insects do a lot more harm than ruining picnics. Some insects spread devastating diseases, while others cause staggering economic losses in agriculture. To control...

Read more: Making sex deadly for insects could control pests that carry disease and harm crops

From ancient emperors to modern presidents, leaders have used libraries to cement their legacies

  • Written by Myrsini Mamoli, Lecturer of Architecture, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageThe Library of Celsus was a famous landmark in its time – and today.Myrsini Mamoli

Here in Atlanta, the Jimmy Carter Presidential Library and Museum has been part of my daily life for years. Parks and trails surrounding the center connect my neighborhood to the Martin Luther King Jr. National Historical Park downtown and everything in between....

Read more: From ancient emperors to modern presidents, leaders have used libraries to cement their legacies

How allies have helped the US gain independence, defend freedom and keep the peace – even as the US did the same for our friends

  • Written by Donald Heflin, Executive Director of the Edward R. Murrow Center and Senior Fellow of Diplomatic Practice, The Fletcher School, Tufts University
imageFrench Gen. Jean de Rochambeau and American Gen. George Washington giving the last orders in October 1781 for the battle at Yorktown, where the British defeat ended the War of Independence.'Siege of Yorktown' painting, Ann Ronan Pictures/Print Collector/Getty Images.

Make Canada angry. Make Mexico angry. Make the members of NATO angry.

During the...

Read more: How allies have helped the US gain independence, defend freedom and keep the peace – even as the...

A fiscal crisis is looming for many US cities

  • Written by John Rennie Short, Professor Emeritus of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageHouston residents at a flooded park after the passage of Hurricane Beryl, July 8, 2024.Mark Felix/AFP via Getty Images

Five years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, many U.S. cities are still adjusting to a new normal, with more people working remotely and less economic activity in city centers. Other factors, such as underfunded pension...

Read more: A fiscal crisis is looming for many US cities

Trump’s threats on Greenland, Gaza, Ukraine and Panama revive old-school US imperialism of dominating other nations by force, after decades of nuclear deterrence

  • Written by Monica Duffy Toft, Professor of International Politics and Director of the Center for Strategic Studies, The Fletcher School, Tufts University

Imperialist rhetoric is becoming a mark of President Donald Trump’s second term. From asserting that the U.S. will “take over” the Gaza Strip, Greenland and the Panama Canal to apparently siding with Russia in its war on Ukraine, Trump’s comments suggest a return to an old imperialist style of forcing foreign lands under...

Read more: Trump’s threats on Greenland, Gaza, Ukraine and Panama revive old-school US imperialism of...

Trump’s move to closer ties with Russia does not mean betrayal of Ukraine, yet – in his first term, Trump was pretty tough on Putin

  • Written by Tatsiana Kulakevich, Associate Professor of Instruction in the School of Interdisciplinary Global Studies, University of South Florida
imageTraditional Russian wooden nesting dolls depict U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin at a gift shop in Moscow on Feb. 13, 2025. Tatyana Makeyeva/AFP via Getty Images

The United States’ steadfast allegiance to Ukraine during that country’s three-year war against Russia appears to be quickly disintegrating...

Read more: Trump’s move to closer ties with Russia does not mean betrayal of Ukraine, yet – in his first...

p53 is both your genome’s guardian and weakness against cancer – scientists are trying to repair or replace it when it goes awry

  • Written by Prosper Obed Chukwuemeka, Ph.D. Candidate in Integrative Systems Biology, University of Pittsburgh
imageTo stop tumors from forming, p53 can trigger programmed cell death.Juan Gaertner/Science Photo Library via Getty Images

Cancer arises when your cells grow uncontrollably and refuse to die when they should. Normally, your body is equipped with regulatory processes to prevent this chaos. One such mechanism involves a protein called p53. Often dubbed...

Read more: p53 is both your genome’s guardian and weakness against cancer – scientists are trying to repair...

Trump order boosts school choice, but there’s little evidence vouchers lead to smarter students or better educational outcomes

  • Written by Charles J. Russo, Joseph Panzer Chair in Education and Research Professor of Law, University of Dayton
imageSurveys suggest growing support for school choice, such as in Ohio, even as voters reject such policies in referendums.AP Photo/Samantha Hendrickson

The school choice movement received a major boost on Jan. 29, 2025, when President Donald Trump issued an executive order supporting families who want to use public money to send their children to...

Read more: Trump order boosts school choice, but there’s little evidence vouchers lead to smarter students or...

The leadership hack that drives success: Being trustworthy

  • Written by Yufei Ren, Associate Professor of Economics, Labovitz School of Business and Economics, University of Minnesota Duluth
imageTrustworthy managers get better performance reviews, recent research shows.Andrey Popov/Getty Images

National Leadership Day, which takes place every Feb. 20, offers a chance to reflect on what truly defines leadership – not just strategy or decision-making, but the ability to build trust. In an era of rapid change, when teams look to leaders...

Read more: The leadership hack that drives success: Being trustworthy

CDC layoffs strike deeply at its ability to respond to the current flu, norovirus and measles outbreaks and other public health emergencies

  • Written by Jordan Miller, Teaching Professor of Public Health, Arizona State University
imageThe CDC played an instrumental, if imperfect, role in the response to COVID-19.JHDT Stock Images LLC/iStock via Getty Images

In just a few short weeks, the Trump administration has brought drastic changes to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and public health. Beginning with the removal of websites and key public health datasets in...

Read more: CDC layoffs strike deeply at its ability to respond to the current flu, norovirus and measles...

More Articles ...

  1. In pushing for Ukraine elections, Trump is falling into Putin-laid trap to delegitimize Zelenskyy
  2. DEI programs are designed to help white people too – here’s how
  3. Greenland’s rapidly melting ice and landslide-prone fjords make the oil and minerals Trump covets dangerous to extract
  4. Deportation fears create ripple effects for immigrants and their communities
  5. How medical treatments devised for war can quickly be implemented in US hospitals to save lives
  6. Traumatic brain injuries have toxic effects that last weeks after initial impact − an antioxidant material reduces this damage in mice
  7. The dangers of ‘Jekyll and Hyde leadership’: Why making amends after workplace abuse can hurt more than it helps
  8. Investors value corporate tax responsibility – at least when the company is based somewhere with a lot of inequality, research shows
  9. Trans people affirmed their gender without medical help in medieval Europe − history shows how identity transcends medicine and law
  10. Why community pharmacies are closing – and what to do if your neighborhood location shutters
  11. Many gluten-free foods are high in calories and sugar, low on fiber and protein, and they cost more − new research
  12. Deporting millions of immigrants would shock the US economy, increasing housing, food and other prices
  13. Firing civil servants and dismantling government departments is how aspiring strongmen consolidate personal power – lessons from around the globe
  14. Nat King Cole’s often overlooked role in the Civil Rights Movement
  15. Philly’s Chinatown has a rich tradition of activism – the Sixers arena fight was just one of many to preserve the neighborhood
  16. How California can rebuild safer, more resilient cities after wildfires without pricing out workers
  17. How Oscar-nominated screenwriters attempt to craft authentic dialogue, dialects and accents
  18. Cutting funding for science can have consequences for the economy, US technological competitiveness
  19. Trump has purged the Kennedy Center’s board, which in turn made him its chair – why does that matter?
  20. Why is water different colors in different places?
  21. Why do skiers sunburn so easily on the slopes? A snow scientist explains
  22. Who are Ismaili Muslims and how do their beliefs relate to the Aga Khan’s work?
  23. Evolving intelligent life took billions of years − but it may not have been as unlikely as many scientists predicted
  24. Congress, not the president, decides on government spending − a constitutional law professor explains how the ‘power of the purse’ works
  25. How Americans really feel about deporting immigrants – 3 charts explain the conflicting headlines from recent polls
  26. How to find climate data and science the Trump administration doesn’t want you to see
  27. Nonprofits get more donations when they vary their Facebook fundraising messages − new research
  28. Parents can soon use QR codes to reveal heavy metal content in baby food
  29. ‘Emilia Pérez’ was nominated for 13 Oscars. Why do so many people hate it?
  30. ‘For You’: What to know about news on TikTok
  31. Enzymes are the engines of life − machine learning tools could help scientists design new ones to tackle disease and climate change
  32. 60 years of progress in expanding rights is being rolled back by Trump − a pattern that’s all too familiar in US history
  33. From Jewish summer camp to gospel to Chabad, Bob Dylan’s faith doesn’t fit in a box − but he’s long had a connection to Israel
  34. Can the president really kill off the penny – and should he?
  35. Syria’s mass graves: Accounting for the dead and disappeared is crucial for the nation to heal
  36. Trump and Maduro refresh a complex relationship governed by self-interest and tainted by Venezuela election fraud
  37. Inflation is heating up again, putting pressure on Trump to cool it on tariffs
  38. How Valentine’s Day was transformed by the Industrial Revolution and ‘manufactured intimacy’
  39. Why federal courts are unlikely to save democracy from Trump’s and Musk’s attacks
  40. How much does scientific progress cost? Without government dollars for research infrastructure, breakthroughs become improbable
  41. In spite of anti-DEI pressures, top corporations continued to diversify in 2024: new research
  42. China flexes its media muscle in Africa – encouraging positive headlines as part of a soft power agenda
  43. Repatriation to Indigenous groups is more than law, it’s human rights − an archaeologist describes the day that lesson hit home
  44. Teenagers turning to AI companions are redefining love as easy, unconditional and always there
  45. Address science misinformation not by repeating the facts, but by building conversation and community
  46. Helping teachers learn what works in the classroom − and what doesn’t − will get a lot harder without the Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences
  47. Even as polarization surges, Americans believe they live in a compassionate country
  48. The New Yorker turns 100 − how a poker game pipe dream became a publishing powerhouse
  49. Decluttering can be stressful − a clinical psychologist explains how personal values can make it easier
  50. Why are migrants dying trying to cross into the US? These are the 3 main risks they face