Over at Executive Functions, Jack Goldsmith offers a sharp critique of the way that the New York Times presented and spun the content of the leaked Supreme Court memos concerning whether to stay the ...
In her first interview, Mel Curth spoke with The Oklahoman about Samantha Fulnecky's essay on gender norms that sparked a ...
Free speech is not an absolute right. It is a social contract. You are free to speak but others are equally free to decide ...
Recent developments have reignited scrutiny of liberal arts education, from a Drexel student's critique of inaccessible academic jargon to survey data showing high regret rates among liberal arts ...
Europe has long preferred to imagine itself as a beacon of rationality, human rights and democratic stability. Within that ...
If the FDA approves a drug for a neglected tropical disease, the company gets a voucher that accelerates review of another drug. This remains controversial.
In reflecting on our final editor’s corner, your very own Editors-in-Chief started thinking back on our four years at ...
In a 40-mintue interview, State Sen. John Cavanaugh responded to criticism from his opponents in Nebraska's 2nd Congressional ...
History does not repeat, but it often rhymes. Gilles Dauvé draws out the uncanny resemblance between the French electoral ...
French Archaeologist Says He Cracked a Mysterious 4,000-Year-Old Bronze Age Script From Ancient Iran
Now, French archaeologist François Desset and his colleagues say they have cracked much of it. If confirmed, their work would ...
Artificial intelligence is starting to move beyond support roles and into the core of scientific discovery. In this episode ...
Abeng, a short-lived newspaper, offers a window into Jamaica's revolutionary currents in the late 60s. Acting as a ...
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