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  • Studies call for state accountability for state harms 
    University of Otago, Wellington—Ōtākou Whakaihu Waka, Pōneke researchers believe the government is breaching the rights of imprisoned and recently-released Māori.... Read more
  • Military spending remains cornerstone of San Diego's economy, impact report reveals
    The military continues to play a vital role in powering San Diego's economy, supporting nearly 357,000 local jobs and contributing $61.3 billion to the region's total economic output, according to the 2025 Military Economic Impact Report (MEIR). The report is released annually by the San Diego Military Advisory Council (SDMAC)... Read more
  • 100 years of menus show how food can be used as a diplomatic tool to make and break political alliances
    Food brings people together. It serves as a tool to communicate political stances, to cultivate cross-cultural comprehension or, if necessary, create tensions. Menus can reflect these intentions by using food to create specific psychological effects and convey symbolic messages. But how exactly is it done?... Read more
  • Gerrymandering in North Carolina limits residents' access to health care centers, study shows
    A University of Massachusetts Amherst study has found that gerrymandering in North Carolina resulted in reduced access to health care services. As states across the country grapple with politically charged redistricting efforts, the finding could ultimately offer a new strategy to fight gerrymandering in the courts, the researchers say.... Read more
  • Digital infrastructure shifts power dynamics between states and tech giants in war
    When large corporations help Ukraine maintain its digital sovereignty, it is not just a matter of technical assistance. They are political actors who are reshaping the relationship between states and private companies, new research shows.... Read more
  • Bathing, dressing, and eating limitations show statistical correlation to medical parole outcomes
    Medical parole, or compassionate release, is a mechanism for people with advanced illness in prison to be released because they are no longer considered public safety threats.... Read more
  • Indigenous political candidates face less voter bias than parties might think: New research
    When political parties consider potential Indigenous candidates, they often worry about voter backlash.... Read more
  • New training helps police combat ethnic profiling
    Ethnic profiling remains a sensitive and complex issue within police work. In his Ph.D. research at the University of Twente, Bas Böing examined how police officers can be more effectively engaged in addressing this problem. His research shows that sustainable change is possible when officers are given space to learn,... Read more
  • How drones are altering contemporary warfare
    In recent months, Russia has frequently flown drones into NATO territory, where NATO countries typically try to shoot them down. By contrast, when three Russian fighter jets made an incursion into Estonian airspace in September, they were intercepted and no attempt was made to shoot them down—although the incident did... Read more
  • Mass shootings spur local voter turnout but don't sway presidential vote choices, study finds
    Mass shootings can spur higher voter turnout in nearby communities, but the effect is highly localized and doesn't appear to change how people vote for president, according to new findings from researchers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU Law.... Read more
  • What did video kill? Study shows engagement-optimized algorithms may reinforce existing beliefs
    A systematic review of academic research in the International Journal of Web Based Communities has looked at the relationship between the leading online video content sites and its recommendation system and how this might affect the circulation of polarized or misleading content. The review analyzed 56 studies investigating how the... Read more
  • How China's latest aircraft carrier will challenge western maritime dominance
    China's new Fujian aircraft carrier, unveiled recently by President Xi Jinping with great fanfare, has been hailed by Chinese state media as a major milestone in the country's naval modernization program and a key development in the country's aspirations to become a maritime power.... Read more
  • AI rivals humans in political persuasion
    New research reveals that people find AI-delivered political arguments convincing. This could help bridge political divides—or fuel polarization.... Read more
  • Africa's drone wars are growing, but they rarely deliver victory
    In the last decade, armed drones have become one of the most visible symbols of modern warfare. Once the preserve of advanced militaries, armed drones are now widely available on the global arms market. Countries such as Turkey, China and Iran are producing lower-cost models and exporting them. In Sudan's... Read more
  • Sex work on trial: What the recently dismissed constitutional challenge means
    Most Canadians have access to workplaces that are safe, promote health and autonomy and, most importantly, are protected by the law. But for people in criminalized professions, including sex work, it's a different story.... Read more
  • What does 'pro-life' mean? There's no one answer, even for advocacy groups that oppose abortion
    As the first American pope, Leo XIV has largely avoided speaking out about domestic politics in the United States.... Read more
  • Fans, not celebrities, drive nationalism on Chinese social media
    In China's social media universe, celebrities are often assumed to set the tone for millions of adoring followers. But a new study led by the University of Michigan shows the dynamic works the other way around: When it comes to online nationalism, fans are the ones leading—and stars are following.... Read more
  • National 211 hotline calls for food assistance quadrupled in days, a magnitude typically seen during disasters
    Between January and mid-October 2025, calls to local 211 helplines from people seeking food pantries in their community held steady at nearly 1,000 calls per day.... Read more
  • Immigrants share democratic basic values, international study finds
    Migrants in Europe stand by the basic values of democracy, according to a new study conducted by a research team led by Professor Marc Helbling, sociologist at the University of Mannheim focusing on Migration and Integration and Executive Board member of the Mannheim Center for European Social Research (MZES).... Read more
  • Populist parties choose divisive issues on purpose, researchers say
    Populists use controversial issues to a far greater extent than other issues to promote their political messages. This is deliberate.... Read more
  • A brief history of congressional oversight, from Revolutionary War financing to Pam Bondi
    Routine congressional oversight hearings usually don't make headlines. Historically, these often low-key events have been the sorts of things you catch only on C-SPAN – procedural, polite and largely ignored outside the Beltway.... Read more
  • Older adults share more political misinformation. Here's why.
    Adults aged 55 and older are significantly more likely to share political misinformation than younger social media users. And it's not because they're unable to discern fake news from real news, according to new University of Colorado Boulder research.... Read more
  • Researchers unite to frame deportations as a national health crisis
    Current U.S. immigration enforcement and deportation policies are producing widespread harm to physical and mental health, with family separation and the specters of fear and intimidation affecting the well-being of immigrant and non-immigrant communities.... Read more
  • Finding the balance for food security in conflict zones
    With more than 1 billion people around the world living in fragile or conflict-affected situations, establishing food security is an increasing challenge.... Read more
  • Is it ok for politicians to use AI? Survey shows where the public draws the line
    New survey evidence from the UK and Japan shows people are open to MPs using AI as a tool, but deeply resistant to handing over democratic decisions to machines.... Read more
  • Online child sexual exploitation is a rising but misunderstood threat—here's what the experts want you to know
    Australians filed over 80,000 reports of online child sexual abuse last financial year, more than double the 36,600 reports in 2021/22.... Read more
  • Are U.S. firms 'decoupling' from China? Yes and no
    In an era of intensifying geopolitical rivalry, the global economy is being reshaped by tensions between the United States and China. For U.S. firms, this raises a pressing question: How should they adjust their supply chains to navigate the future?... Read more
  • Voting behavior in elections strongly linked to future risk of death
    Voting behavior in elections is strongly linked to the future risk of death, and is likely a stronger determinant of health than education—considered a key influence on health—suggests research published online in the Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health.... Read more
  • Oklahoma tried out a test to 'woke-proof' the classroom. It was short-lived, but could still leave a mark
    Oklahoma has become a testing ground for reshaping public school curriculum to reflect conservative viewpoints, Make America Great Again priorities and a push for Christian nationalism in the classroom.... Read more
  • The threat of space terrorism is no longer science fiction, but we're ill-prepared to combat it
    As satellite technology surges ahead and space becomes increasingly accessible to private and state actors alike, the new and unsettling threat of space terrorism looms above Earth's atmosphere.... Read more
  • 1 in 3 US nonprofits that serve communities lost government funding in early 2025
    About one-third of U.S. nonprofit service providers experienced a disruption in their government funding in the first half of 2025.... Read more
  • Hidden economy of ransom-based human trafficking in Libya affects hundreds of thousands of migrants
    Since 2013, a hidden and lucrative economy of ransom-based human trafficking has emerged in Libya, run by traders who attempt to bring migrants and refugees to Europe via the Sahara and the Mediterranean Sea. Based partly on interviews, Ph.D. researcher Morgane Wirtz reveals a system of imprisonment, (sexual) violence, and... Read more
  • Survey: Californians don't know cannabis driving laws
    A new study from University of California San Diego has found that while a third of Californians use cannabis regularly, there are significant gaps in knowledge around cannabis use and driving. The researchers found that even six years after the legalization of recreational cannabis use, adults in California demonstrate mixed... Read more
  • EU ambiguity on Western Sahara frozen conflict is a 'glaring source' of vulnerability for Sahrawis, study shows
    The European Union's legal ambiguity on the Western Sahara frozen conflict is an increasingly glaring source of vulnerability for Sahrawis, a new study shows.... Read more
  • The politics of milk: How a simple drink got caught up in power, culture and identity
    Milk is one of the most familiar things in the world—comforting, wholesome, ordinary. But beneath this common perception lies something far more complicated.... Read more
  • Ideological polarization and spread of biased or fake news on Facebook are on the rise, according to study
    A study led by Pompeu Fabra University (UPF) confirms the rise in ideological polarization and biased or false news posted on Facebook. This research analyzed over 6 million news-related URLs—from 1,231 different domains in the United States—shared on Facebook between 2017 and 2020.... Read more
  • Global supply chains benefit most from who you know, says study
    In a time of tariffs and political trade disputes, new UBC Okanagan research shows that it's not what you know but who you know—and how well you treat them.... Read more
  • Agree to disagree: Why we fear conflict and what to do about it
    In an era of heightened political polarization, merely longing for civility is no longer enough. Understanding just how to debate and respectfully disagree has become truly imperative, now more than ever and for a couple good reasons.... Read more
  • Why are young people more likely to cast informal votes? It's not because they're immature
    In Australia, where turning up to vote is mandatory, deliberately spoiling your ballot is one of the only legal ways to protest or opt out.... Read more
  • Offline interactions predict voting patterns better than online networks, finds study
    According to a new study, offline social networks, revealed by co-location data, predict U.S. voting patterns more accurately than online social connections or residential sorting. Michele Tizzoni and colleagues analyzed large-scale data on co-location patterns from Meta's Data for Good program, which collates anonymized data collected from people who enabled... Read more
  • Gunboat diplomacy: How classic naval coercion has evolved into hybrid warfare on the water
    Over the summer, the United States deployed warships to the Caribbean—ostensibly to menace drug traffickers but also as a none-too-subtle warning to Venezuela. Earlier in the year, a U.S. Navy destroyer bobbed along waters close to Iran for similar reasons. And in the Taiwan Straits and Pacific, China and the... Read more
  • UK research warns of trust erosion in criminal justice system
    The growing age imbalance in the duty solicitor scheme in England and Wales risks eroding trust in the criminal justice system, a new study warns. Most duty solicitors are aged 45 and over, putting at risk the ability of vulnerable suspects to access timely and effective legal representation at the... Read more
  • How 'conflict-free' minerals are used in the waging of modern wars
    Minerals such as cobalt, copper, lithium, tantalum, tin and tungsten, which are all abundant in central Africa, are essential to the comforts of everyday life. Our phones, laptops and electric vehicles would not function without them.... Read more
  • Drought, sand storms and evacuations: How Iran's climate crisis gets ignored
    Iran and Israel fought a 12-day war in June. Although a ceasefire was declared the same month, news coverage of Iran continues to focus on the conflict's aftermath and the Middle East's tense political situation.... Read more
  • 10 effective things citizens can do to make change in addition to attending a protest
    What happens now?... Read more
  • Street lighting and public safety: Researchers evaluate the effect of improved street lighting on crime rates
    It's an almost universally accepted truth that walking in well-lit areas is safer. But Aaron Chalfin, associate professor of criminology in Penn's School of Arts & Sciences; John MacDonald, criminology professor and director of the Master of Science in Criminology, and Brian Wade, senior data scientist at Penn's Crime and... Read more
  • Does individual climate action distract from the big picture? New research has answers
    New research suggests that trying to change people's climate habits won't hurt support for big picture solutions.... Read more
  • Study reveals corporate directors on charity boards drive pro-corporate lobbying
    A study in Management Science finds that public charities with corporate directors on their boards are significantly more likely to lobby on behalf of the connected firms' political interests. More to the point, the research found that nonprofit governance structures can quietly serve as extensions of corporate influence into the... Read more
  • Anger, not fear, drives shifts in political attitudes after threats, study finds
    Political attitudes and opinions can and do shift, sometimes drastically. Recent psychological research from Washington University in St. Louis offers insight into how emotional responses to threats contribute to shifts in political attitudes.... Read more
  • How anti-vaccine sentiment helped raise funds and saved the lives of some ostriches
    More than 300 ostriches have been threatened with destruction in eastern British Columbia after avian flu was detected in the flock. The birds' owners have argued this is a case of "unjust governmental overreach."... Read more

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EDITOR’S PICKS:

  • New cathode chemistry slashes self-discharge in grid-scale zinc-iodine batteries

    November 14, 2025
    The formula powering aqueous zinc-iodine batteries has been brought under the microscope, with researchers from the University of Adelaide finding a way to enhance their performance.This post was originally published on this site

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  • Commercial Refrigeration Repair

    July 17, 2025
    🧊 Commercial Refrigeration Repair: Keeping Your Business Cool and Compliant In industries where temperature control is critical, commercial refrigeration systems are the unsung heroes. From restaurants and supermarkets to medical labs and floral shops, these [...]
  • Safeguarding Freezers and Bottom Lines: Comprehensive Walk-In Freezer Repair in Focus

    June 23, 2025
    When nothing can thaw, and stock must remain frozen solid, walk-in freezers stand as silent sentinels of enterprise. Whether in grocery store backrooms, seafood markets, or pharmaceutical cold chains, walk-in freezer repair is a critical [...]

More Hot Topics:

  • Video podcasts become next streaming battleground

    November 14, 2025
    Big tech platforms, including TikTok and Netflix, are all looking to add video podcasts to their content, a rapidly growing format that attracts a young [...]
  • Google proposes adtech changes to avoid breakup after EU fine

    November 14, 2025
    Google on Friday announced changes to its advertising services to avert the risk of a breakup, two months after Brussels hit the US giant with [...]
  • Google to pay millions to South African news outlets: Watchdog

    November 13, 2025
    Google will pay more than $40 million to support South African news media, many of them floundering in a digital age, the country’s competition authority [...]
  • EU probes Google over news site rankings

    November 13, 2025
    The EU launched a fresh investigation into Google Thursday over suspicions the US giant is pushing down news outlets in search results, despite retaliation threats [...]
  • Anthropic, Microsoft announce new AI data center projects as industry’s construction push continues

    November 12, 2025
    Artificial intelligence company Anthropic announced a $50 billion investment in computing infrastructure on Wednesday that will include new data centers in Texas and New York.This [...]

Tech Headlines:

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Meta and TikTok to obey Australia under-16 social media ban

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