Voters Don’t Like Name-Calling In Politics
Attack ads may grab headlines, but the negative messages could backfire in the 2022 midterm elections.
The Conversation: Weekly News Quiz
Test your knowledge about the week’s news events.
Early Starts And Late-Night Screens: Why Teens Struggle To Get Enough Sleep
There are good reasons it’s hard to roust a teenager from bed for school, but they can be addressed.
Philippine Leader Ferdinand Marcos Jr. Says Calling His Father A Dictator Is ‘Wrong’
Human rights activists rejected the assertion, saying that the elder Marcos used martial law to scrap elections and centralize power unto himself.
Intense Heat And Flooding Are Wreaking Havoc On America’s Aging Infrastructure
Roads, bridges, water and power systems are being battered by climate change.
Not Everybody Is Happy About Digital Nomads
As countries ranging from Indonesia to Mexico aim to attract digital nomads, locals say “not so fast.”
Debunking Stereotypes About Mobile Homes Could Make Them A New Face Of Affordable Housing
Decades of experience shows that resident ownership can transform manufactured home parks from sites of stigma and vulnerability into stable and resilient communities.
US Coast Guard Cutter Is Denied Port Call In Solomon Islands
The prime minister alarmed some neighbors after he signed a new security pact with China, which has been expanding its footprint in the region.
How The Inflation Reduction Act Strengthens EPA’s Future Abilities To Curb Greenhouse Gases
The new legislation doesn’t get around the Supreme Court’s climate ruling in West Virginia v. EPA, but it amends the Clean Air Act to add new programs to reduce greenhouse gases.
What Yoga Says About Democracy
New research recognizes progressive spiritual practitioners as a growing but largely unrecognized, underestimated and misunderstood political force.