Unpacking the power of privileged neighborhoods
Conventional wisdom says that place matters more for people who live in distressed neighborhoods—places with low median incomes and not a lot of opportunity
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Conventional wisdom says that place matters more for people who live in distressed neighborhoods—places with low median incomes and not a lot of opportunity
Online platform boasting 11,500 academic experts answering public questions seeks backing for global expansion
Three seemingly unconnected words have helped rescue a mother and daughter after a car crash in remote rural Somerset.
The economics department at CUNY-John Jay College advertised a paid position for a Democratic presidential campaign in a mass email
New association will seek to tackle class-based barriers prevalent in academia, says chair
Liberty University president Jerry Falwell Jr., among the most vocal supporters of the president's executive order, criticized for censorship of student journalists on his campus.
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’ attempts to swiftly roll back major Obama-era policies at her agency are hitting a roadblock: federal courts.
A Colorado college hosted a Native American activist Wednesday to discuss the idea that nature and “Mother Earth” should be given rights, allowing the Earth to also be given legal protection.
In Shenzhen, China, a sprawling metropolis of over 12 million people, more than 16,000 city buses run on batteries, moving commuters to jobs and residents to shops using electricity instead of diesel.
Some 1.5 million people in England are at high risk of losing their jobs to automation, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS).