By Vijayan Asari, Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering, University of Dayton
If you are fortunate enough to have a ticket to an event at Madison Square Garden in New York – say, an NBA Finals game – one aspect of your visit will be having your face scanned by a facial recognition system. Major event venues are increasingly using the technology. Some, like Madison Square Garden, use it for surveillance purposes, and some, like Citizens Bank Park in Philadelphia,…
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By Tatishe Nteta, Provost Professor of Political Science, UMass Amherst Adam Eichen, Ph.D. Candidate in Political Science, UMass Amherst Jesse Rhodes, Associate Professor of Political Science, UMass Amherst
White Americans who watch Fox News are more likely to agree that shadowy political elites are embracing permissive immigration policies to replace native-born white Americans.
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By Jennifer McCurdy, Assistant Professor of Bioethics and Social Justice, Michigan State University
Hospitals rely on ethics consultants to help navigate difficult decisions about life support, consent and a patient’s wishes when the path forward is unclear.
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By Stephanie Shreffler, Religious Collections Librarian/Archivist and Associate Professor, University Libraries, University of Dayton Bridget Retzloff, Assistant Professor and Coordinator of Art Collections and Exhibits, University of Dayton
Mary, as the Immaculate Conception, became patroness of the United States before the Vatican officially defined that belief as dogma.
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By David Baidoo-Anu, Assistant Professor, Frazer Faculty of Education, Ontario Tech University Monsurat Raji, Adjunct Professor, L’Université d’Ottawa/University of Ottawa
The West African Senior School Certificate Examination (WASSCE) is a high-stakes test. For decades, it has served as the gateway to post-secondary education across five countries: Ghana, Nigeria, Sierra Leone, Liberia and The Gambia. But is it fair? David Baidoo-Anu and Monsurat Raji say their research…
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By Wolde Mekuria, Senior Researcher - Environment and Development, CGIAR
Ethiopian communities are cheaply filling destructive gullies with soil, stones and branches and replanting them to stop erosion and restore farmland.
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By Annika Surmeier, Senior Lecturer, Graduate School of Business, University of Cape Town, University of Cape Town Ines Meyer, Professor, University of Cape Town Molefe Maleka, Associate Professor, Tshwane University of Technology
Global supply chains lead to companies capturing most of the value, while suppliers – and especially workers – get a much smaller share.
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By Umutcan Yüksel, Analyst /Researcher, European University Institute Amanda Bisong, Policy Leader Fellow, School of Transnational Governance, European University Institute
The European Union has used money and enforcement infrastructure as the twin pillars of its migrant returns strategy. The evidence suggests it isn’t working.
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By Sumesh Sasidharan, Civis3i Senior Research Fellow, Faculty of Medicine AMU, Aix-Marseille Université (AMU)
In cardiology, sex and gender-sensitive diagnosis and treatment planning are crucial, but biological differences remain the missing link in AI-powered human virtual twin technology.
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By Davide Vampa, Senior Lecturer in Territorial Politics, University of Edinburgh
The Scottish parliamentary election in May saw Reform UK return the same number of MSPs to Holyrood – 17 – as Scottish Labour. This remarkable result – effectively from a standing start – showed that the party is now a force to be reckoned with in Scotland just as in other parts of the UK. But where did it attract votes north of the border? My analysis examines constituency-level patterns in support for Reform UK, compared with the other main parties. It focuses on three constituency characteristics:
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