By Stephen Siff, Associate Professor of Journalism, Miami University
George Plimpton, then a 36-year-old literary editor, endured the brutal realities of a professional football quarterback despite barely ever playing the sport.
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By Saif Khan, Ph.D. Candidate in Biology, University of Southern California
Naloxone can reverse an overdose in minutes, but exactly how it does this at the molecular level has previously been unclear.
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By Mark Louie Ramos, Assistant Research Professor of Health Policy and Administration, Penn State
Researchers design studies that might disprove what’s called their null hypothesis – the opposite of the claim they’re interested in exploring.
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By Asher Kaufman, Professor of History and Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame
Since the start of the truce on Nov. 27, 2024, there have been thousands of Israeli violations inside Lebanese territory, while Hezbollah has yet to disarm.
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By Tevis Garrett Graddy-Lovelace, Provost Associate Professor of Environment, Development and Health, American University School of International Service
Despite the administration’s claim of streamlining the government to make its operations more efficient, a range of recent federal policies have, in fact, exacerbated food wastage.
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By Marelize Isabel Schoeman, Professor, University of South Africa
In a recent statement, South Africa’s minister of correctional services said more than 18,000 parolees had reoffended in the past three years. They included 209 committing murder and 330 rape during 2024-25. This is one of the country’s most pressing justice problems, yet it remains poorly understood. It’s called recidivism:…
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By Stephen Leonard Mensah, PhD Candidate, University of Memphis Louis Kusi Frimpong, Senior Lecturer, University of Environment and Sustainable Development Seth Asare Okyere, Teaching Assistant Professor, University of Pittsburg and Visiting Associate Professor, The University of Osaka, University of Pittsburgh
Wetlands are vital ecological resources that provide several benefits in urban and peri-urban areas. They slow down flood waters, and act as a source of fishing and farming livelihoods. They also provide socio-cultural benefits for local communities. But some of these valuable ecosystems, due to their presence in prime locations, are at the centre of competing cultural, ecological and economic interests. Property development, especially, is a threat to wetlands. The 2025…
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By Zunaida Moosa Wadiwala, Legal Researcher, PhD Candidate and Lead of the African Climate Law Programme, Mandela Institute, University of the Witwatersrand Tracy-Lynn Field, Director of the Mandela Institute, Professor of Law, University of the Witwatersrand
Some African countries have consumer protection laws that they could use to hold fossil fuel companies accountable for pretending to be green.
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By Federico Donelli, Associate Professor of International Relations, University of Trieste
The competition for global influence and control is shifting. One of the places where this dynamic is playing out is the Red Sea region, which encompasses Egypt, Eritrea, Djibouti, Sudan, Saudi Arabia and Yemen. Here, international rivalries, regional ambitions and local politics collide. Federico Donelli, who has studied these political dynamics and recently published Power…
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By Christopher Alcantara, Professor of Political Science, Western University Craig Mutter, Graduate Student, Political Science, Western University Laura Stephenson, Professor of Political Science, Western University
It’s not that youth don’t care enough to vote. It’s that they are turning away from conventional, formal participation in favour of alternative ways of sharing and expressing their views.
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