‘The failure of race-blind economic policy’
Sociologist Adia Harvey Wingfield, of Arts & Sciences, writes in The Atlantic about race-blind policies and the concern that legislators could make pre-existing disparities worse.
Is smoking pot during pregnancy safe?
Alison Cahill, MD, associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology
Obesity strongly linked to 11 types of cancer
Graham Colditz, MD, DrPH, the Niess-Gain Professor of Surgery
Breakthrough moments: Randolph on Crohn’s disease work
Gwendalyn Randolph, chief of the Division of Immunobiology at the School of Medicine, discusses her groundbreaking work to better understand Crohn’s disease in this video from the Kenneth Rainin Foundation.
In Religious Freedom Debate, 2 American Values Clash
John Inazu, the Sally D. Danforth Distinguished Professor of Law & Religion
‘How today’s white middle class was made possible by welfare’
Margaret Garb, of Arts & Sciences, writes an article on the “In These Times” website about the history of welfare programs in America and the difference they made for the white middle class.
The cost to taxpayers of protecting Trump’s kids on overseas business trips
Kathleen Clark, professor of law
Why Leaking Information Is as American as Apple Pie
Kathleen Clark, professor of law
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