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Released: 3-May-2022 3:00 PM EDT
The latest expert commentary on the U.S. Supreme Court
Newswise

Are you looking for expert commentary on the leaked opinion draft that appears to overturn Roe v. Wade? Newswise has you covered! Below are some of the latest headlines that have been added to the U.S. Supreme Court channel on Newswise.

       
Newswise: Lessons from the Tuskegee Experiment, 50 Years After Unethical Study Uncovered
28-Apr-2022 8:00 AM EDT
Lessons from the Tuskegee Experiment, 50 Years After Unethical Study Uncovered
American Thoracic Society (ATS)

This year marks 50 years since it came to light that the nation’s leading public health agency, the Public Health Service, conceived an unethical “research study” - the Tuskegee Experiment – that lasted for 40 years. The participants? Black men in a rural community in the South who existed in a state of quasi-slavery, making them extremely vulnerable and the agency’s treatment of them that much more sickening.

Released: 2-May-2022 10:05 AM EDT
Run for the roses: FSU professor reflects on history of the Kentucky Derby
Florida State University

By: Kathleen Haughney | Published: May 2, 2022 | 9:52 am | SHARE: All eyes are on Churchill Downs this week as the horse racing industry prepares for the 148th Kentucky Derby.Associate Professor of History Katherine Mooney is available to provide expert commentary to reporters covering the event. Mooney is the author of “Race Horse Men,” which examines the generations of Black men who built the racing industry and who were ultimately driven from their jobs with the rise of Jim Crow laws.

Newswise:Video Embedded live-event-for-april-28th-the-tuskegee-syphilis-study-50-years-later-why-it-still-matters
VIDEO
Released: 28-Apr-2022 4:05 PM EDT
VIDEO AND TRANSCRIPT of Live Event for April 28th: The Tuskegee Syphilis Study 50 Years Later. Why It Still Matters
Newswise

It’s been 50 years since the Tuskegee Study was disclosed to the American public. In May, a new riveting account of the Study, when government doctors intentionally withheld effective therapy for syphilis for 40 years in 400 African American men, will be published in the American Journal of Respiratory and Critical Care Medicine. The article explains the deeper everlasting lessons of the study.

       
Newswise: Additions to Natural History Collections Declining
Released: 28-Apr-2022 2:05 PM EDT
Additions to Natural History Collections Declining
Cornell University

A new study from the Cornell University Museum of Vertebrates reveals that new additions of vertebrate specimens to natural history collections are declining precipitously. The authors suggest that it is vital to maintain collecting efforts in order to address future unforeseen ecological issues.

Newswise: Before Stonehenge monuments, hunter-gatherers made use of open habitats
21-Apr-2022 11:05 AM EDT
Before Stonehenge monuments, hunter-gatherers made use of open habitats
PLOS

Study investigates habitat conditions encountered by first farmers and monument-builders.

Released: 11-Apr-2022 4:20 PM EDT
Study sheds new light on the origin of civilisation
University of Warwick

New research from the University of Warwick, the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Reichman University, Universitat Pompeu Fabra and the Barcelona School of Economics challenges the conventional theory that the transition from foraging to farming drove the development of complex, hierarchical societies by creating agricultural surplus in areas of fertile land.

Newswise: CSU Dominguez Hills Gerth Archives Awarded New Grants for LGBTQ and L.A. Free Press Collections
Released: 7-Apr-2022 6:05 PM EDT
CSU Dominguez Hills Gerth Archives Awarded New Grants for LGBTQ and L.A. Free Press Collections
California State University, Dominguez Hills

The archives received a $100,000 grant from the California State Library to support CSUDH’s LGBTQ History Access Project, and $40,000 from the John Randolph Haynes and Dora Haynes Foundation to begin the cataloguing of the L.A. Free Press collection.

Released: 6-Apr-2022 1:50 PM EDT
The living legacy of names
University of California, Santa Barbara

Around the world, statues of historic figures who symbolize colonialism and oppression are being critically examined, and often removed.

Newswise: Migrants from south carrying maize were early Maya ancestors
Released: 23-Mar-2022 3:45 PM EDT
Migrants from south carrying maize were early Maya ancestors
University of New Mexico

New research published this week by University of New Mexico archaeologist Keith Prufer shows that a site in Belize was critical in studying the origins of the ancient Maya people and the spread of maize as a staple food.

Newswise: Preserving the past
Released: 22-Mar-2022 1:10 PM EDT
Preserving the past
Sandia National Laboratories

Christina Chavez, Sandia National Laboratories' first full-time archaeologist, works with teams throughout Sandia to ensure the U.S. Department of Energy remains in compliance with Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act.

Newswise: Study reconsiders name of Peru’s Machu Picchu
Released: 22-Mar-2022 11:25 AM EDT
Study reconsiders name of Peru’s Machu Picchu
University of Illinois Chicago

Findings suggest Incas had a different name for the site

Released: 21-Mar-2022 4:50 PM EDT
Leftovers in prehistoric pots let scientists peek into the kitchen of an ancient civilization
Frontiers

How to reconstruct the cookery of people who lived thousands of years ago? Bones and plant remains can tell us what kind of ingredients were available.

Released: 17-Mar-2022 1:50 PM EDT
Global instability and the timing of Russia’s attack on Ukraine
Washington University in St. Louis

Analyzing more than 200 years of conflicts, David Carter at Washington University in St. Louis finds revisionist states — like Russia — have made territorial claims when the great powers that dominate the international system are embroiled in crisis.

Newswise: History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes
Released: 17-Mar-2022 9:35 AM EDT
History doesn’t repeat, but it rhymes
Michigan Medicine - University of Michigan

The two-year anniversary of the COVID-19 pandemic came and went without much fanfare, thanks to a lull in cases and deaths, and the start of a war in Ukraine that has grabbed the world’s attention. But for medical historians who led an exhaustive study of the 1918 influenza pandemic, the recent milestone offers a chance to look back on the parallels, and differences, in how the nation responded to both massive infectious threats.

Newswise: CSUDH History Professor Wins Prestigious NEH Award
Released: 15-Mar-2022 6:05 PM EDT
CSUDH History Professor Wins Prestigious NEH Award
California State University, Dominguez Hills

The fellowship is for CSUDH Professor of History Bianca Murillo's next book, Financing Africa’s Future: A Socio-Economic History of Ghana, 1950-1980.

Newswise: Little Altars, Big Impact
Released: 15-Mar-2022 3:45 PM EDT
Little Altars, Big Impact
University of Northern Colorado

The legacy of artist, activist and UNC alumna Lydia Ruyle '72 is being celebrated during Women's History Month through an exhibition featuring her lively banners of divine goddesses

Newswise: WVU experts discuss all things Appalachia
Released: 14-Mar-2022 11:30 AM EDT
WVU experts discuss all things Appalachia
West Virginia University

West Virginia University hosts the national Appalachian Studies Conference from March 17-20, 2022. Before, during and after the conference, University experts are available to offer insights on Appalachian issues, culture and research.



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