Unless Biden Acts, Trump’s Assault on Human Rights will Continue
We are asking a court for protection from Trump’s sanctions against the International Criminal Court, writes the School of Law’s Leila Sadat.
Five myths about compensation
Actually, very few workers are paid based on their job performance, writes Jake Rosenfeld in the Washington Post.
Chancellor Martin reflects on ‘a difficult and remarkable year’
In a message to the WashU community, Chancellor Andrew D. Martin shares how in the past year, we have proven the resilience of our community, our commitment to caring for people, and our ability to act quickly and selflessly in support of the greater good. He reflects on how much we’ve lost and how far we’ve come.
‘How much COVID-19 news should parents talk to their kids about?’
Jessica Gold, MD, assistant professor of psychiatry at the School of Medicine, who writes about mental health and the media, discusses a TV episode that explores how parents talk with their children about the news related to COVID-19.
Falling through the cracks: shining a light on adolescent girls in humanitarian emergencies
Without protection, girls are more likely to experience sexual violence, unwanted pregnancies, forced marriage, physical abuse and exploitation, with little access to resources that can promote resilience, writes the Brown School’s Lindsay Stark in The Conversation.
A Film That Tests Assumptions About Race, Rape, and Power
Eileen G’Sell, lecturer in college writing, reviews “Test Pattern,” which she says chronicles a biracial courtship and coupledom as a means of probing larger power asymmetries.
Crum analyzes voting rights case pending before Supreme Court
Travis Crum, of the School of Law, writes on the Election Law Blog about a major voting rights case that the Supreme Court heard this week, Brnovich v. DNC, and the questions it raises about how race and political party factor into the law being challenged.
What the policing response to the KKK in the 1960s can teach about dismantling white supremacist groups today
David Cunningham, chair of sociology in Arts & Sciences, discusses 1960s KKK rallies and police crackdowns in this piece in The Conversation.
New Episode Of The Conners Asks: “How Much Covid-19 News Should Parents Talk To Their Kids About?”
Psychiatrist Jessica Gold discusses how to chat with your children about COVID-19 in this piece in Forbes.
Reflecting on Egypt’s Arab Spring at 10
Nancy Reynolds, associate professor in Arts & Sciences and a historian of the modern Middle East, writes about the 10th anniversary of what came to be known as the Arab Spring in Egypt and the need to “embrace analytical untidiness” and complexity to fully understand it.
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