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  • War in Ukraine is transforming the country's criminal landscape, report finds
    War in Ukraine is transforming the country's criminal landscape, causing economic and social damage, finds research led by Dr. Taras Fedirko for the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).... Read more
  • 'I just couldn't stop crying': How prison affects Black men's mental health long after they've been released
    Mike returned home to Philadelphia after a 15-year prison sentence and suffered an emotional breakdown.... Read more
  • Cognitive warfare: Why wars without bombs or bullets are a legal blind spot
    Imagine waking up to the news that a deadly new strain of flu has emerged in your city. Health officials are downplaying it, but social media is flooded with contradictory claims from "medical experts" debating its origin and severity.... Read more
  • 'AI is not intelligent at all': Why our dignity is at risk
    The age of artificial intelligence (AI) has transformed our interactions, but threatens human dignity on a worldwide scale, according to a study led by Charles Darwin University (CDU).... Read more
  • Increased transparency about how countries use AI to manage migration needed, experts urge
    Increased transparency from countries about how they use AI to manage migration is needed to boost trust and strengthen the rule of law, a new study says.... Read more
  • Optimism about AI lowest in US
    Optimism that AI will make human jobs easier is lowest in the developed world, especially in the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom, France and Australia.... Read more
  • Tariffs, explained—and explored
    Tariffs—taxes placed on imported goods—are one of the oldest tools in the United States' economic policy arsenal, dating back to the 18th century. Recently they've returned to the spotlight in a big way. From steel and solar panels to shoes and semiconductors, tariffs have been used to confront economic rivals,... Read more
  • Brexit: Maintaining domestic focus, UK investors avoided European markets, study shows
    After Brexit, London slowed down investments in Europe. While Europe continues to focus on the United Kingdom. A recent study in Research Policy, co-authored by Vincenzo Butticè, Annalisa Croce and Andrea Odille Bosio from the Department of Management, Economics and Industrial Engineering at Politecnico di Milano, and Simone Signore and... Read more
  • Study finds elites' offshore asset strategies shaped by home country governance
    Billionaires, oligarchs, and other members of the uber-rich, known as "elites," are notorious for the use of offshore financial systems to conceal their assets and mask their identities. Understanding the transnational offshore finance networks that they utilize has long been a challenge given the secrecy involved.... Read more
  • Expert finds access to high-paying jobs—not unequal pay for the same job—is the biggest driver of immigrant wage gaps
    Immigrants in the United States earn 10.6% less than similarly educated U.S.-born workers, largely because they are concentrated in lower-paying industries, occupations and companies, according to a major new study published in Nature, co-authored by a University of Massachusetts Amherst sociologist who studies equal opportunity in employment.... Read more
  • Taliban 'maintaining a balancing act' in relationships with other local jihadi groups, study shows
    Taliban leaders have chosen to maintain a delicate balancing act in their relationships with other local violent jihadi groups since taking power in Afghanistan, new research shows.... Read more
  • Tyranny is an ever-present threat to civilizations. Here's how Classical Greece and China dealt with it
    We're just a few months into US president Donald Trump's second term but his rule has already been repeatedly compared to tyranny.... Read more
  • Beyond health: The political effects of infectious disease outbreaks
    The COVID-19 pandemic has drawn attention to the far-reaching social implications of emerging infectious diseases, bringing to mind similarly impactful events like the Black Plague in early modern Europe or the Spanish Flu after World War I. However, how emerging epidemics shape the development of political mistrust and instability has... Read more
  • Health-impaired world leaders raise nuclear war fears, study suggests
    Many former leaders of the world's nine nuclear-armed nations were impaired by health conditions while in office, raising concerns over their decision-making abilities while they had access to nuclear weapon launch codes, a study from the University of Otago, New Zealand, has found.... Read more
  • Mathematicians reveal factors driving gun sales in America
    As gun sales in the United States continue to soar, researchers at Georgia State University have uncovered insights into what drives Americans to buy firearms. A new study published in PNAS Nexus journal reveals the complex interaction among media coverage, social media activity and firearm purchases.... Read more
  • Doing business in conflict zones: What companies can learn from Lafarge's exit from Syria
    The world experienced more than 60 armed conflicts in 2024, a "historically high" number according to scholars in the Department of Peace and Conflict Research at Uppsala University. Consequently, the risks faced by multinational companies (MNCs) operating in conflict-torn regions, especially the Middle East and North Africa, have significantly intensified.... Read more
  • Reading news on social media for two weeks improves knowledge and fake news recognition, study finds
    Consuming news on social media is often associated with "doom scrolling," where people spend excessive time online consuming negative news. However, researchers have found that this same behavior, when leveraged effectively, can help foster a well-informed society.... Read more
  • Do local voting rights affect migrants' participation in protests?
    In research published in Social Science Quarterly, the study's investigator expected that migrants living in cities where local voting rights are extended to non-citizens would be more likely to engage in protests compared with those in restrictive contexts. However, the findings revealed the opposite: migrant protests seem to flourish not... Read more
  • Perceived polarization may reflect inner circle agreement more than actual societal division
    Are opinions on controversial political issues as divided as many people perceive them to be? Researchers from the Leibniz Center for Tropical Marine Research (ZMT) in Bremen, the Complexity Science Hub (CSH) in Vienna and the University of California Merced have addressed this question in a new social science study.... Read more
  • There are many things American voters agree on, from fears about technology to threats to democracy
    During his recent public spat with Donald Trump, Elon Musk tweeted a poll asking if a new political party would better represent the 80% of voters in the middle. Hundreds of thousands of people responded and more than 80% answered "yes."... Read more
  • Data show Canadian border plays minor role in US fentanyl trafficking compared to southern entry
    Illegally manufactured fentanyl kills a significant number of people in the United States and Canada every year. Since the emergence of modern heroin markets in the late 1960s, controlling supply has been associated with important reductions in opioid use and harms in several cases worldwide. But these efforts depend on... Read more
  • Giving back or getting back? The rise of retributive philanthropy
    Picture this: A person is so outraged by a company's actions that instead of writing a complaint, they write a check to a charity that stands in direct opposition. Their donation isn't just about doing good. It's about making a point.... Read more
  • Youth volunteering encourages young men to vote for the first time, research shows
    Youth volunteering encourages young men from politically disengaged homes to vote for the first time by raising their interest in civic life, new analysis shows.... Read more
  • Civil servants' reactions to democratic decline reflect deep political divides
    A new study reveals that civil servants, like citizens, do not uniformly recognize and oppose political attacks on liberal democracy. How they view such attacks and respond depends heavily on their social and political affiliation. Civil servants who recognize politicians' actions as undermining democratic norms are more likely to withdraw—by... Read more
  • Welcome to post-growth Europe. Can anyone accept this new political reality?
    Across much of Europe, the engines of economic growth are sputtering. In its latest global outlook, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) sharply downgraded its forecasts for the UK and Europe, warning that the continent faces persistent economic bumps in the road.... Read more
  • Social media can support or undermine democracy. It comes down to how it's designed
    Every design choice that social media platforms make nudges users toward certain actions, values and emotional states.... Read more
  • Russia is paying schoolgirls to have babies. Why is pronatalism on the rise around the world?
    In some parts of Russia, schoolgirls who become pregnant are being paid more than 100,000 rubles (nearly £900) for giving birth and raising their babies.... Read more
  • New US directive for visa applicants turns social media feeds into political documents
    In recent weeks, the US State Department implemented a policy requiring all university, technical training, or exchange program visa applicants to disclose their social media handles used over the past five years. The policy also requires these applicants to set their profiles to public.... Read more
  • Q&A: How eyewitness memory can serve justice
    Eyewitness misidentifications have long been a source of wrongful convictions, casting doubt on the reliability of memory in the courtroom. But UC San Diego psychologist John Wixted says the story doesn't end there. His research shows that if memory is tested the right way—early, carefully, and only once—it can be... Read more
  • International student activism histories show how education can foster democracy
    On March 25, 2025, a Turkish Ph.D. student at Tufts University, Rümeysa Öztürk, was walking in a Boston suburb when she was detained by plain-clothed federal agents. A video of the encounter went viral, sparking fear and outrage in the United States and beyond.... Read more
  • Billions voted in 2024, but major new report exposes cracks in global democracy
    A new report from the University of East Anglia has raised concerns about the state of democracy around the world during 2024's "Super Cycle" of elections.... Read more
  • Marginalized Americans are highly skeptical of artificial intelligence, research finds
    Artificial intelligence may be marketed as society's great equalizer—transforming businesses, streamlining work and making life easier for all—but for many marginalized Americans, AI doesn't feel like a promise.... Read more
  • The rule of law is key to capitalism. Eroding it is bad news for American business
    Something dangerous is happening to the U.S. economy, and it's not inflation or trade wars. Chaotic deregulation and the selective enforcement of laws have upended markets and investor confidence. At one point, the threat of tariffs and resulting chaos evaporated US$4 trillion in value in the U.S. stock market. This... Read more
  • Despite claims they'd move overseas after the election, most Americans are staying put
    Based on pronouncements in 2024, you might think now is the time to see U.S. citizens streaming out of the country. Months before the 2024 presidential election, Americans were saying they would leave should candidate Donald Trump win the election. Gallup polling in 2024 found that 21% of Americans wanted... Read more
  • Is 'balance' just gentrification in disguise? New study challenges housing policy
    Cities around the world pursue urban renewal under the banner of resilience and diversity. The idea is simple: if neighborhoods include socially and economically diverse residents, it will lead to stronger social cohesion, greater trust, and mutual support among the community. One common approach is to mix residents from different... Read more
  • New research highlights pros and cons for firms taking political stands
    A new study from King's Business School and the University of Edinburgh has found that aligning corporate identity with political ideology can help businesses resonate with certain stakeholders—but may also restrict strategic flexibility and create internal tensions.... Read more
  • Study unpacks how 2025 tariffs shocked global supply chain
    In the wake of the largest series of U.S. tariff hikes since 1930, a new study from Michigan State University explores how this economic shock is reshaping global supply chains and offers a framework to help researchers and policymakers make sense of the chaos. The study was recently published in... Read more
  • Americans largely disapprove of attacks on science and medicine, survey finds
    Americans disapprove of the Trump administration's policies targeting science and medicine by a margin of more than 2 to 1, according to a survey by Rutgers and other universities.... Read more
  • All major UK political parties lack boldness needed to tackle poverty, new research says
    New research, which has reviewed major U.K. political parties' past manifestos, finds they all lack the boldness needed to tackle the structural roots of inequality and significantly raise people out of poverty.... Read more
  • Anti-witchcraft laws fail to prevent thousands of annual accusations and deaths, according to report
    Every year thousands of people globally are wrongly accused of witchcraft, often with fatal consequences yet, says new research, legislation designed to stamp out the barbaric practices is rarely used.... Read more
  • Cyberattacks shake voters' trust in elections, regardless of party
    American democracy runs on trust, and that trust is cracking.... Read more
  • Tests to detect marijuana-impaired driving are based on 'pseudoscience,' argue researchers
    For years now, U.S. police departments have employed officers who are trained to be experts in detecting "drugged driving." The problem is, however, that the methods those officers use are not based on science, according to a new editorial in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs (JSAD).... Read more
  • Study identifies political divides over green transport initiatives and how to bridge them
    Green transport initiatives such as bicycle lanes or creating spaces for electric vehicle charging points have become heated political battlegrounds in the United Kingdom, and British people respond to such proposals broadly in line with their political party preference and political orientation, new research from the University of Bath shows.... Read more
  • When politicians gain power, their language becomes garbled
    It's well known that governing parties often lose voters over time—the so-called cost of governing. But a new study from Frederik Hjorth, Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Copenhagen, documents a lesser-known but potentially crucial side effect of being in government: politicians begin to speak less simply... Read more
  • Disabling images and videos on WhatsApp cut misinformation exposure during Brazilian election, study finds
    Elected officials, political analysts, and nonprofit organizations have for years spotlighted the spread of online election information in Western democracies—largely with a focus on media platforms popular in these nations, such as X and Facebook.... Read more
  • Nearly half of New Jerseyans say state is on wrong track, citing taxes, affordability and cost of living
    New Jerseyans continue to give a somewhat split assessment on the direction of the Garden State, and pocketbook issues top the list of residents' biggest concerns, according to the latest Rutgers-Eagleton Poll.... Read more
  • Using TikTok could be making you more politically polarized, new study finds
    People on TikTok tend to follow accounts that align with their own political beliefs, meaning the platform is creating political echo chambers among its users. These findings, from a study my collaborators, Yanlin Li and Homero Gil de Zúñiga, and I published in the academic journal New Media & Society,... Read more
  • Self-censorship and the 'spiral of silence': Why Americans are less likely to publicly voice their political opinions
    For decades, Americans' trust in one another has been on the decline, according to the most recent General Social Survey.... Read more
  • Seeing men as the 'default' may be tied to attitudes towards politicians and Black people
    In an international study, participants' attitudes toward certain social groups—namely, politicians and Black people—were more strongly related to their attitudes towards the men than the women of each group, suggesting that men are the "default" for attitudes towards these groups.... Read more
  • In UK study, the risk of certain types of crime, but not others, increase after dark
    A UK study of data on more than 30,000 crimes sheds new light on crime after dark, suggesting that the overall risk of crime rises when darkness falls, but that risk varies depending on type of crime and geographical area. Jim Uttley of the University of Sheffield, UK, and colleagues... Read more

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EDITOR’S PICKS:

  • Walk-through screening system enhances security at airports nationwide

    July 11, 2025
    A new security screener that people can simply walk past may soon be coming to an airport near you. Last year, U.S. airports nationwide began adopting HEXWAVE—a commercialized walkthrough security screening system based on microwave [...]

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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:

  • US House passes landmark crypto measures in win for Trump

    July 18, 2025
    The US House of Representatives on Thursday passed three landmark cryptocurrency bills, fulfilling the Trump administration’s commitment to the once-controversial industry.This post was originally published [...]
  • Netflix profits surge off ads, higher subscription prices

    July 18, 2025
    Netflix reported stronger-than-expected second-quarter results Thursday, with profit jumping 45% year-over-year as the streaming giant benefited from subscription price increases and a growing advertising business.This [...]
  • OpenAI’s advisory board calls for continued and strengthened nonprofit oversight

    July 18, 2025
    OpenAI should continue to be controlled by a nonprofit because the artificial intelligence technology it is developing is “too consequential” to be governed by a [...]
  • Amazon’s carbon emissions jump as AI push tests company’s climate pledge

    July 17, 2025
    Amazon’s greenhouse gas emissions rose by 6% last year, due mostly to pollution generated by the company’s delivery fleet and increased data center construction.This post [...]
  • Zuckerberg settles lawsuit over Cambridge Analytica scandal

    July 17, 2025
    Meta chief Mark Zuckerberg and other company board members settled a shareholder lawsuit on Thursday concerning decisions made in the wake of the Cambridge Analytica [...]

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