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  • 'Dark' personality traits thrive in societies with corruption and inequality, global study shows
    A new global study shows that people in societies characterized by corruption, inequality, poverty, and violence are more likely to develop aversive, "dark" personality characteristics such as selfishness or spitefulness.... Read more
  • Integrated model explains violent extremism
    What makes a person willing to use violence?... Read more
  • Expert Q&A: Could artificial intelligence make war and peace decisions?
    NPR recently reported that the Center for Strategic and International Studies' Futures Lab is experimenting with tools such as DeepSeek and ChatGPT to explore how artificial intelligence could change—and improve—how foreign policy decisions are made.... Read more
  • Geographic bias in virus naming: Lessons from coronavirus show it's better to act early
    "China virus," the Chinese virus—at the start of the 2020 pandemic, this epithet was often encountered in the media. The use of geographically based labels to define the disease (COVID-19) and the virus causing it (SARS-CoV-2) had significant consequences on public opinion, fueling and amplifying—sometimes with very serious outcomes—prejudices against... Read more
  • Why coalitions with populists fail sooner: Study finds instability due to political style, not radical ideology
    Populist parties have long ceased to be a marginal phenomenon. They are now an established political force in many European countries and are fundamentally challenging the democratic system. These parties use harsh rhetoric against the "elite" and present themselves as the sole representatives of the "true will of the people."... Read more
  • Higher energy prices reduce support for climate policy, survey shows
    Households affected by high electricity prices during the energy crisis tend to be more negative toward climate policy. Research from the School of Business, Economics and Law at the University of Gothenburg shows that perceived unfairness reinforces misconceptions about fuel taxes.... Read more
  • Federal R&D funding boosts productivity for the whole economy. Making big cuts to such government spending unwise
    Large cuts to government-funded research and development can endanger American innovation—and the vital productivity gains it supports.... Read more
  • AI models show promise in evaluating complex forensic evidence in legal contexts
    An international research collaboration used AI as research participants and discovered that knowledge-enhanced large language models are able to critically assess forensic expert testimonies.... Read more
  • What's the potential effect of sanctions on Israeli ministers? Here's what my research shows
    Australia, Canada, New Zealand, Norway and the UK this week announced sanctions against two members of the Israeli cabinet: National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir and Finance Minister Bezalel Smotrich.... Read more
  • Remember when corporate America steered clear of politics on social media?
    There was a time when corporate America was not very online. Most companies used social media for promoting products and services or engaging with consumers in a friendly fashion. Political posts on a company Twitter account were rare.... Read more
  • New study challenges assumptions linking racial attitudes and political identity in U.S. cities
    Nearly 40% of U.S. cities analyzed in a study in NPJ Complexity diverge from the common narrative that Republican-dominated areas have high levels of implicit racial bias while Democratic strongholds are more tolerant.... Read more
  • Higher levels of trust in people and institutions linked to greater well-being
    People with higher levels of trust—in both others and institutions—report higher levels of subjective well-being, an important indicator of quality of life and predictor of health and longevity, than those with lower levels of trust, according to research published in Psychological Bulletin.... Read more
  • Assessing the current state of polycrises and systemic risk research
    The COVID-19 pandemic, Russia's war on Ukraine, geopolitical tensions, climate change and other events highlight our growing exposure to complex, interconnected, and intertwining risks. In view of this development, the focus of risk research has shifted towards the comprehensive analysis of interconnected and mutually interactive risk sources and crises.... Read more
  • Partial peace deals may facilitate comprehensive accords, offering roadmap for policymakers
    Over the past two decades, conflicts in more than 40 countries, including El Salvador, Northern Ireland, Senegal and the Philippines, have ended in comprehensive peace agreements. But these broader accords don't happen all at once.... Read more
  • Couples with opposing political views face higher risk of separation, study finds
    A recent study by researchers at the University of Padua and the Max Planck Institute for Demographic Research (MPIDR) has revealed that political differences between partners can significantly increase the risk of separation. Using long-term data from UK couples, the researchers found that those with different party preferences were substantially... Read more
  • Voters share a unified view of politicians who punish corporate free speech
    A new study by Northwestern University asks whether voters approve of politicians who use the power of their office to retaliate against corporate political speech criticizing the politician's actions.... Read more
  • Antagonism to transgender rights is tied to the authoritarian desire for social conformity
    Since becoming president, Donald Trump has aggressively sought to fulfill his campaign promise to reverse the Biden administration's protection of transgender Americans.... Read more
  • Data reveal sharp increase in conflicts and wars
    The number of armed conflicts in the world reached a historic high in 2024. This is shown by new data from the Uppsala Conflict Data Program (UCDP) at Uppsala University. Despite a marginal decrease in total fatalities, targeted violence against civilians increased significantly.... Read more
  • How cable news has increasingly diverged from broadcast news
    Walter Cronkite was often cited as "the most trusted man in America" as he delivered the news on CBS in the 1960s and '70s—a time when fewer news options created a "shared reality" that scholars argue fostered civic engagement, empathy, and shared national identity. The situation looks quite different in... Read more
  • Fake news and real cannibalism: A cautionary tale from the Dutch Golden Age
    The Dutch Golden Age, beginning in 1588, is known for the art of Rembrandt, the invention of the microscope, and the spice trade of the Dutch East India Company. It ended a little under a century later in a frenzy of body parts and mob justice.... Read more
  • Looser gun laws tied to thousands more US child shooting deaths
    US states that loosened their gun laws following a landmark court ruling saw thousands more childhood firearm deaths than they otherwise would have—the vast majority homicides and suicides—according to a study published Monday.... Read more
  • Violent youth assaults on police often triggered by past trauma, Australian study finds
    A University of the Sunshine Coast study has found most young people charged with assaulting police had experienced childhood abuse, poverty, unstable housing and institutional failures.... Read more
  • Russia using museums for ideological indoctrination about the Ukraine invasion, study shows
    Russian leaders have increasingly used museums and their digital collections to show propaganda about Slavic unity and deny Ukrainian identity since the 2022 invasion, analysis shows.... Read more
  • Was the Boulder attack terrorism or a hate crime? Two experts unpack the complexities
    Twelve people in Boulder, Colorado, were injured by a man wielding a makeshift flamethrower and Molotov cocktails on June 1, 2025. Those burned in the attack were taking part in a peaceful, silent walk on Pearl Street, a pedestrian mall, with the aim of raising awareness about Israeli hostages held... Read more
  • Americans still have faith in local news, but few are willing to pay for it
    Many Americans say they have lost trust in national news—but most still believe they can rely on the accuracy of local news.... Read more
  • How Instagram profiles relate to political/social content use
    A new study by The University of New Mexico identifies two different Instagram profiles and how they are associated with using Instagram to stay informed about political and social issues.... Read more
  • How Trump's trade war is supercharging the fast fashion industry
    When US President Donald Trump introduced sweeping new tariffs on Chinese imports the goal was to bring manufacturing back to American soil and protect local jobs.... Read more
  • New book explores misinformation's history, psychology, social impact and potential solutions
    The internet might seem like a convenient culprit driving recent attention and concerns about misinformation, but pointing fingers exclusively at the digital age is narrow and limiting.... Read more
  • UN scientists propose a 'global trust' to safeguard critical minerals as trade tensions mount
    Amid intensifying trade wars, geopolitical tensions, and surging demand for AI and clean energy technologies, United Nations scientists and global experts have unveiled a bold proposal for a "Global Minerals Trust"—a cooperative, multilateral governance mechanism to ensure fair, sustainable, and conflict-free access to critical minerals.... Read more
  • For Haitian migrants in the Dominican Republic, 'reproduction is like a death sentence'
    On May 9, Lourdia Jean-Pierre, a 32-year-old Haitian migrant woman, died after giving birth in her rural home in El Ceibo, Dominican Republic. The cause of death was a postpartum hemorrhage, according to a news report in The Haitian Times.... Read more
  • How violent is Britain? New study examines conflicting trends in official violent crime statistics
    A new study examining conflicting trends in official violent crime statistics reveals that the leading measure in England and Wales underestimates the level of violent crime—and the findings challenge official confidence in a downward trend.... Read more
  • Young people who witness domestic violence are more likely to be victims of it. Here's how we can help them
    In our national discussions on domestic and family violence, much of the focus is rightly on the women experiencing the violence and how best to help them.... Read more
  • How useful are states' adolescent social media laws?
    Bills related to adolescent social media regulation have been adopted in more than half of all U.S. states. Research in The Milbank Quarterly finds that these state policies—such as school cell phone bans and anti-cyberbullying laws—have significant limitations. The study identifies research priorities that will help inform more effective interventions.... Read more
  • Workplace equality laws spark surprising gains for women in the boardroom, research finds
    Amid global rollbacks of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) initiatives—from the United States to parts of Europe—a new study has found that US state-level protections for LGBTQIA+ employees are not only helping to curb workplace discrimination, but are also driving greater gender diversity in corporate boardrooms.... Read more
  • Why Brazil's Quilombola communities are still fighting for the land they're owed
    Brazil's Quilombola people, the descendants of Africans who escaped slavery, have lived in the nation's vast Amazon and Atlantic rainforests for centuries. Today, the Quilombolas number about 1.3 million people in the country and have cultivated deep ties to their ancestral territories, where they raise their families and steward the... Read more
  • Autocrats don't act like Hitler or Stalin anymore. Instead of governing with violence, they use manipulation
    President Donald Trump's critics often accuse him of harboring authoritarian ambitions. Journalists and scholars have drawn parallels between his leadership style and that of strongmen abroad. Some Democrats warn that the U.S. is sliding toward autocracy—a system in which one leader holds unchecked power.... Read more
  • Does the key to uniting against divisive politics lie in our personal lives?
    Modern Britain is plagued by a sense of disempowerment and political exclusion—a feeling that is, somewhat ironically, shared between groups of people who otherwise feel divided from one another.... Read more
  • Mexico's cartels use violence against women as a means of social control
    Mexico's drug cartels are often described as powerful rivals to the state, with their influence measured in weapons, money and murdered officials. But this framing misses a fundamental truth. Organized crime in Mexico is also a system of gendered governance—one that disciplines, controls and sometimes eliminates women to consolidate power.... Read more
  • Online game proven to reduce partisan animosity
    Algorithmically-driven social media has split red and blue America into separate information environments. But a new online tool, developed at Harvard, can bring citizens back together.... Read more
  • Framing social issues as 'civil rights' can sometimes backfire
    Framing is a powerful tool in communications: It can help people grasp complex ideas, but it can also distort or mislead. A recent sociological study suggests that framing social issues as "civil rights" can sometimes have surprising and even negative consequences.... Read more
  • Three ways the government can silence opinions it disagrees with, without using censorship
    When most people think of how governments stifle free speech, they think of censorship. That's when a government directly blocks or suppresses speech. In the past, the federal government has censored speech in various ways. It has tried to block news outlets from publishing certain stories. It has punished political... Read more
  • Some countries are undermining Western sanctions against Russia, study finds
    The European Union has just imposed a new package of sanctions against Russia—now the seventeenth. Following Russia's invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the U.S. and EU had already imposed extensive economic sanctions, combined with far-reaching export bans.... Read more
  • Veterans' protests planned for D-Day latest in nearly 250 years of fighting for their benefits
    Veterans across the United States will gather on June 6, 2025, to protest the Trump administration's cuts to the Department of Veterans Affairs, as well as the slashing of staff and programs throughout the government. Veteran-led protests will be held at the National Mall, 16 state capitol buildings and over... Read more
  • Creating better policy with consensus-building tools
    Community policies, such as those for zoning or parking, are typically made at the top, which can leave community members feeling frustrated or left out of the process. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University's School of Computer Science (SCS) developed the web-based tool PolicyCraft to help community members use concrete cases... Read more
  • Many police forces have found ICE agreements undermine public safety
    During his first few months in office, President Donald Trump has been establishing a framework for deporting undocumented immigrants en masse. It's something he has previously vowed will be "the largest deportation operation in the history of our country."... Read more
  • Tracking crime from the cradle: Why some people keep breaking the law while most of us never do
    A major Australian study tracking more than 80,000 Queenslanders from birth to adulthood reveals stark differences between men and women in patterns of criminal behavior.... Read more
  • How cheap combat drones are reshaping the Russia-Ukraine war
    Drones have become a game-changer in the Russia-Ukraine War—so much so that they could potentially transform Ukraine into a defense powerhouse in Europe, according to one Northeastern University observer.... Read more
  • Researchers devise method to identify '311' underreporting of heat and hot water shortages
    Complaint lines such as New York City's 311 let people report quality-of-life problems in their building or neighborhood, from excessive noise to illegal parking. But resident-generated data typically suffers from reporting bias, with some neighborhoods and addresses calling attention to problems at lower rates than others.... Read more
  • Targeting foreign students, Trump hits a US lifeline
    On the campaign trail last year, then-candidate Donald Trump proposed handing US residency cards automatically to international students when they earn diplomas, bemoaning that they were leaving to form successful companies in China and India.... Read more
  • Why so few atrocities have ever been recognized as genocide
    An intense argument is raging over whether what has been happening in Gaza since October 2023 is an act of genocide. It is the subject of a case being heard in the International Court of Justice (ICJ) in which South Africa has accused Israel of committing acts of genocide. The... Read more

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EDITOR’S PICKS:

  • A foundation for physical AI: Battery-free RFID sensing system offers real-time, reliable data

    June 12, 2025
    What if the same RFID “smart barcode” tags used to track packages and retail inventory could also detect changes in the real world—like temperature, pressure or weight—without batteries or added hardware?This post was originally published [...]

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  • What To Do If You Have a Warrant for Your Arrest

    March 4, 2025
    Finding out that there’s an active warrant out for your arrest can be quite overwhelming. Whether it’s a misunderstanding, an oversight, or something more serious, knowing what to do next is paramount. The first step [...]
  • Winter weather leads to multi-vehicle collisions in Barrie

    February 18, 2025
    Barrie police closed two areas Monday afternoon following separate multi-vehicle collisions, likely caused by weather conditions. The crashes occurred around 2:30 p.m. on Veteran’s Drive between Walker Road and McKay Road, and on Yonge Street [...]

More Hot Topics:

  • Anthropic says looking to power European tech with hiring push

    June 13, 2025
    American AI giant Anthropic aims to boost the European tech ecosystem as it expands on the continent, product chief Mike Krieger told AFP Thursday at [...]
  • Should global media giants shape our cultural and media policy? Lessons from satellite radio

    June 12, 2025
    Debates about regulating Canadian content for streaming media platforms are ongoing, and key issues include revising the definition of Canadian content for audio and visual [...]
  • Lithium supply will fall short of growing electric vehicle demand through 2029, analysis finds

    June 12, 2025
    In a study published in Cell Reports Sustainability, researchers conducted the most comprehensive analysis to date on lithium supply and demand in China, Europe, and [...]
  • From fishing family to Big Tech: French CEO takes on Silicon Valley

    June 12, 2025
    At just 39 years old, Fidji Simo is poised to become OpenAI’s second-in-command after leaving her mark at two other major tech firms, including Meta.This [...]
  • Nairobi startup’s bid to be ‘operating system for global South’

    June 12, 2025
    Away from the heady rush to build ultra-capable, sci-fi style artificial intelligence in Silicon Valley, ambitious Nairobi-based startup Amini AI is betting on the technology [...]

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