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No country still uses an electoral college—except the US

The United States is the only democracy in the world where a presidential candidate can get the most popular votes and still lose the election. Thanks to the Electoral College, that has happened five times in the country's ...

Research collaboration examines Filipino migration dynamics

Over one million Filipinos leave their country every year to work. The high emigration figures not only concern the Philippine state, but also the economist Andreas Steinmayr. In July 2024, he resumed a long-standing collaboration ...

Using AI to predict climate-driven migration

Despite climate-driven migration becoming more common, socioeconomic factors still play a crucial role in people's decisions to flee, according to a recent study. Research conducted at the University of Skövde, in collaboration ...

Can visiting genocide memorials make you more empathic?

Each year, people visit museums and memorial sites as part of educational interventions organized around the remembrance of a genocide or an atrocity. Many schools visit a concentration camp as part of Holocaust education, ...

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Social Sciences
The political, social and psychological toll of family deaths in war
Social Sciences
How foreign operations are manipulating social media to influence people's views
Social Sciences
Kamala Harris has spoken of her racial backgrounds, but a shared identity may not be enough to attract supporters
Social Sciences
Colleges could benefit from taking a data-driven look at hostility toward Jews on campus
Social Sciences
Some online conspiracy-spreaders don't even believe the lies they're spewing, researchers find
Political science
Research sheds light on impact and bias of voter purging in Michigan
Political science
Political parties in South America relied on will of the people to implement major economic reforms, analysis shows
Political science
Victims of state scandals harmed further by compensation schemes
Political science
Europe wants tighter border controls. Research looks at Italy's political attitudes toward migration
Economics & Business
Consumers' support for trade and immigration declines, small change on higher taxes for wealthy
Political science
How Soviet legacy has influenced foreign policy in Georgia and Ukraine
Social Sciences
Why climate activists keep targeting art galleries despite public outcry
Social Sciences
New article provides orientation to using implementation science in policing
Economics & Business
Community sports need provincial 'assist' to thrive, says report
Social Sciences
Opinion: When even fringe festival venues exclude people with disability, cities need to act on access
Social Sciences
Study: Conservative users' misinformation sharing drives higher suspension rates, not platform bias
Social Sciences
How do 'double skeptics' affect government policy on climate and vaccination?
Social Sciences
Climate shocks associated with higher rates of intimate partner violence against women
Political science
Q&A: Why do election polls seem to have such a mixed track record?
Political science
Trust in US Supreme Court continues to sink, survey finds

Other news

Evolution
Ancient hominins had humanlike hands, indicating earlier tool use, study reveals
Plants & Animals
Seven new frog species discovered in Madagascar
Plants & Animals
Rangers lead effort to monitor Uganda's lion population in critical stronghold
Plants & Animals
Modern mass extinction in an Ecuadorean cloud forest found to be a mirage
Ecology
New temperature conditions found in two thirds of key tropical forests
Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric oxidation and the creation of modern Mars
Evolution
Scientists discover one of the Earth's earliest animals in Australian outback
Quantum Physics
Study explores the physical origin of errors in a spin qubit processor
Archaeology
Traces of ancient immigration patterns to Japan found in 2,000-year-old genome
General Physics
LIGO team enhances gravitational wave detection with squeezed light
Economics & Business
Trio wins economics Nobel for work on wealth inequality
Earth Sciences
Global warming is happening, but not statistically 'surging,' new study finds
Biotechnology
Expansion in situ genome sequencing innovation makes hidden DNA-protein interactions visible
Astronomy
Astronomers observe a strong superflare from giant star
Plants & Animals
A brown ale or hoppy lager? Even fruit flies have a preference
Archaeology
Archaeologists discover Armenia's oldest church
Plants & Animals
Ant–plant symbiosis study finds climate change may be destabilizing mutualistic relationships
Planetary Sciences
Asteroid-sample return mission enables researchers to conduct largest geophysical observation campaign of its kind
Ecology
Invasive seaweed may better adapt to changes than native species in Hawaii waters
Earth Sciences
Earthquake fault friction's dependence on temperature different from previously thought

Sports media use linked to belief in rape myths

Young men in a recent study who were regular consumers of sports media were more likely to accept rape myths, a set of false and prejudiced beliefs that can serve to excuse or downplay sexual assault.

Q&A: What does an aging Congress mean for a much younger nation?

The United States has the second-oldest legislature in the world in terms of politicians' ages, according to Kevin Munger, the Jeffrey L. Hyde and Sharon D. Hyde and Political Science Board of Visitors Early Career Professor ...

New study: Political animosity is global

A new study by an interdisciplinary team of researchers across six different countries has found that affective polarization, or the tendency to dislike people who belong to opposing political parties while favoring people ...