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Today's Presidential Candidates Go Where the Voters Are—But These Past Campaigns Succeeded by Bringing the Voters to the Candidates
By Jeffrey Normand Bourdon / History News Network
The Past and Future of Punctuation Marks
By Florence Hazrat / History Today
Archival Photos Reveal the Unlikely Beauty of Sewer Systems
By Thea Petchler / Zócalo Public Square
3D Printing and the Murky Ethics of Replicating Human Bones
By Sarah Wild / Undark
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syndication
Scientists Have Been Talking About Climate Change for More Than a Century. Here's Why It Took So Long for the World to Listen
The scientific consensus on climate change is far older than many people think
By David Carlin / History News Network
January 10, 2020
What We Can Learn From Ancient Graffiti
The earliest graffiti of a person’s name on a monument has been identified by the historian Lionel Casson in a cave at Wadi Hammamat in Egypt — the name of Hena, an official under Menutuhotep III in 2000 BC
By Laura Aitken-Burt / History Today
January 10, 2020
What Alexander Hamilton Would Have Thought About a Wealth Tax
All taxation was on the framers’ table as they considered a new constitution. What would they make of the measures we are considering now?
By Ray Raphael / History News Network
December 6, 2019
AI Can Now Make Medical Predictions From Raw Data. But Can Deep Learning Be Trusted?
The stakes sit particularly high in medicine, where lives are on the line
By Eric Bender / Undark
December 6, 2019
Why Some People Love Black Friday—and Others Hate It, According to Psychologists
Including ways for you to comfortably participate in the bargains
By Michael Breazeale, Mississippi State University / The Conversation
November 27, 2019
The History of Modern Mass Incarceration of African Americans Goes Deeper Than You May Think
A Louisiana law of 1848 declared that children born to enslaved female prisoners confined in the penitentiary belonged to the state
By Jeff Forret / History News Network
November 25, 2019
When the Suez Canal Opened 150 Years Ago, It Helped Connect the World—And Heralded the Climate Crisis
The largest infrastructural project of the 19th century annexed the Middle East into the fossil-fuels complex
By On Barak / History News Network
November 21, 2019
The Long History of Mormons in Mexico Began More Than a Century Before the Killing of 9 U.S. Citizens There
Members of Utah’s Latter-Day Saints community emigrated to Mexico in the 1880s to follow their religious beliefs
By Rebecca Janzen, University of South Carolina / The Conversation
November 7, 2019
The Hidden Forces Behind the Rise and Fall of Colorful Kitchens in Postwar America
In the '50s, color in the kitchen became a way to stand out from generations past
By Regina Lee Blaszczyk / The MIT Press Reader
November 1, 2019
Not All Candy is Created Equal — At Least for Tax Purposes
States must draw a fine line on which treats are eligible for sales tax breaks
By Hayes Holderness, University of Richmond / The Conversation
October 31, 2019
The Evolutionary Reason We Love Big, Blood-Curdling Screams
Screams may seem simple, but they can actually convey a complex set of emotions
By Frank T. McAndrew, Knox College / The Conversation
October 31, 2019
A Historic U.K. Law Was Passed After a Wave of Anti-Migrant Sentiment. Here's How It Shaped British Immigration Policy
The Aliens Act of 1905 created a new type of immigrant to the U.K. and a new way of dealing with them
By Marc Di Tommasi / History Today
October 24, 2019
After Sexual Assault, Some Survivors Seek Healing in Self-Defense
Researchers note self-defense for survivors can be similar to exposure therapy
By Gitit Ginat / Undark
October 22, 2019
Do DNA Databases Make Would-Be Criminals Think Twice?
Some argue that this sort of biosurveillance raises civil rights concerns
By Oscar Schwartz / Undark
October 21, 2019
Andrew Yang's Universal Basic Income Plan Echoes a 1930s Proposal That Reshaped Social Security
Yang isn't the first to pitch the idea of giving Americans a guaranteed income
By Edwin Amenta / The Conversation
October 16, 2019
How the Ban on Medical Advertising Hurt Women Doctors
From 1997 to 2016, healthcare advertising spending rose from $2.1 to $9.6 billion
By Olivia Campbell / JSTOR Daily
October 16, 2019
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