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Some good news on opioid epidemic: Treatment options are expanding

  • Written by William Greene, Assistant Professor, Psychiatry, University of Florida
imageGovernor Charlie Baker of Massachusetts and unidentified woman at a rally in November aiming to destigmatize addiction. Joanne DeCaro/flickr, CC BY-NC-SA

In the past two decades, the devastation associated with opioid addiction has escaped the relative confines of the inner city and extended to suburban and rural America. Due in large part to the...

Read more: Some good news on opioid epidemic: Treatment options are expanding

Putin, Obama and the battle for Aleppo

  • Written by Layla Saleh, Assistant Professor of International Affairs, Qatar University, Qatar University

The battle for Aleppo has the Arab world, Middle East observers and Western policymakers on edge.

In what is likely a turning point in the long Syrian civil war, a coalition of opposition fighters is attempting to break Bashar al-Assad regime’s siege of the country’s commercial capital. Meanwhile, the Syrian government – with...

Read more: Putin, Obama and the battle for Aleppo

Remembering Michael Brown: Why black youth are branded as criminals

  • Written by Carl Suddler, Visiting Assistant Professor of Black American Studies, University of Delaware

Two years ago, on Aug. 9, 2014, Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old African-American teenager, was shot and killed by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri. Two years have passed since the recent high school graduate was denied the opportunity to begin his next stage of life: college.

Brown was often described as a “gentle giant.&rdqu...

Read more: Remembering Michael Brown: Why black youth are branded as criminals

Here's how competition makes peer review more unfair

  • Written by Stefano Balietti, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Northeastern University
imageWhat are the implications of peer review on competition in science?PROChristian Guthier, CC BY

A scientist can spend several months, in many cases even years, strenuously investigating a single research question, with the ultimate goal of making a contribution – little or big – to the progress of human knowledge.

Succeeding in this hard...

Read more: Here's how competition makes peer review more unfair

Trump's economics speech: seeking conservative cred and kissing babies

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University

Editor’s note: Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump delivered an economic policy speech on August 8 in Detroit that called for aggressive sanctions against U.S. trading partners, a rollback of environmental regulations and large tax cuts. He offered a few new policy proposals but primarily sought to contrast himself with rival...

Read more: Trump's economics speech: seeking conservative cred and kissing babies

How do Olympic athletes pay the electric bill?

  • Written by Edward Etzel, Professor of Sport and Exercise Psychology, West Virginia University

Last week, while sitting in traffic, I noticed a weathered bumper sticker with a little acoustic guitar on it that said: “Real musicians have day jobs.”

I presume most of us do have real day jobs, but as the Rio Olympic Games begin, for some reason – maybe because I’m an ex-Olympic shooter – I wondered about the...

Read more: How do Olympic athletes pay the electric bill?

Goodbye to the barbershop?

  • Written by Kristen Barber, Assistant Professor of Sociology, Southern Illinois University
imageNationwide, barbershops are on the decline.'Barber' via www.shutterstock.com

With their red, white and blue striped poles, dark Naugahyde chairs and straight razor shaves, barbershops hold a special place in American culture.

But numbers show that barbershops are dwindling. According to census data, from 1992 to 2012 we saw a 23 percent decrease in...

Read more: Goodbye to the barbershop?

How labor's decline opened door to billionaire Trump as 'savior' of American workers

  • Written by Raymond Hogler, Professor of Management, Colorado State University

Out of the economic maelstrom of the last decade, Donald Trump has emerged as the improbable, and self-proclaimed, champion of American workers.

And that’s despite the fact that Trump has failed to articulate substantive policy positions regarding labor issues, other than generic railing against foreign competition and bad trade deals....

Read more: How labor's decline opened door to billionaire Trump as 'savior' of American workers

Record high global migration may give new meaning to 'diaspora'

  • Written by Jualynne Dodson, Professor of Sociology and African American & African Studies, Michigan State University

Groups of human beings have always moved or migrated from one geographic location to another. This phenomenon continues in the 21st century and is driven by national and international wars, globalization of local and regional communities, changes in climate and other such events.

Within the first decades of the 21st century, millions of women, men...

Read more: Record high global migration may give new meaning to 'diaspora'

More Articles ...

  1. Fethullah Gülen: public intellectual or public enemy?
  2. Who owns your tattoo? Maybe not you
  3. Brazil’s sewage woes reflect the growing global water quality crisis
  4. After fatality, autonomous car development may speed up
  5. I'm an OB-GYN treating women with Zika: This is what it's like
  6. Are soaring levels of income inequality making us a more polarized nation?
  7. Latinos face digital divide in health care
  8. What the Bourne films get right and wrong about amnesia
  9. Why it's hard for adults to learn a second language
  10. The talking dead: how personality drives smartphone addiction
  11. Build disaster-proof homes before storms strike, not afterward
  12. If cash is king, how can stores refuse to take your dollars?
  13. Geomythology: Can geologists relate ancient stories of great floods to real events?
  14. On rocky road to Rio, the biggest loser may be the glory of hosting Olympics
  15. Music training speeds up brain development in children
  16. Expanding citizen science models to enhance open innovation
  17. Will the Amish turn out for Trump? Don’t bet the farm
  18. Don't let the scale fool you: Why you could still be at risk for diabetes
  19. Deadly medical errors are less common than headlines suggest
  20. What the favorite TV shows of Trump supporters can tell us about his appeal
  21. Will social media define the success of the Olympic Games?
  22. Can environmentalists learn to love – or just tolerate – nuclear power?
  23. Radicals in the Democratic Party, from Upton Sinclair to Bernie Sanders
  24. Can 'climate corridors' help species adapt to warming world?
  25. Museum economics: how the contemporary art boom is hurting the bottom line
  26. It's not 'corporate poaching' – it's a free market for brilliant people
  27. As coal mining declines, community mental health problems linger
  28. Why Bernie Sanders' supporters should be good losers
  29. As the Olympics approach, stains on Rio's architecture, infrastructure
  30. Why many people don't talk about traumatic events until long after they occur
  31. The future of genetic enhancement is not in the West
  32. Sex on TV: Less impact on teens than you might think
  33. Why Brazil's post-Olympics hangover will hit so hard
  34. Since ancient Greece, the Olympics and bribery have gone hand in hand
  35. Want college to be affordable? Start with Pell Grants
  36. In Zika, echoes of US rubella outbreak of 1964-65
  37. Philip Morris gets its ash kicked in Uruguay; where will it next blow smoke?
  38. A record 65.3 million people were displaced last year: What does that number actually mean?
  39. Why 'Sharknado 4' matters: Do climate disaster movies hurt the climate cause?
  40. How vulnerable to hacking is the US election cyber infrastructure?
  41. Traveling to Mars with immortal plasma rockets
  42. Help your children play out a story and watch them become more creative
  43. Can your Facebook friends influence your decision to buy a house?
  44. Do opioids make pain worse?
  45. German responses to terror range from cautious to conspiratorial
  46. A third term for the Clintons?
  47. More than scenery: National parks preserve our history and culture
  48. Clinton vs. Trump: Whose acceptance speech hit the right note?
  49. Will the historic nature of Clinton's nomination give her a bump in the polls?
  50. Does practice make an Olympian? Not by itself