Focusing on biases may improve desired career plans of military veterans
The study was conducted at Duke University.
Researchers dive into the copycat effect in American-based school shootings
In this study, school shootings based in the U.S. were probed between 1990 through 2017.
How exposure to police stops may induce severe distress among Black adolescents
The study included nearly 1,500 American adolescents who were exposed to police stops.
The majority of Latinos in America believe the immigration system should be revamped
A majority of respondents in the survey said major changes to the U.S. immigration system are necessary.
New research probes the link between misogyny and right-wing extremism
The study aimed at probing the initial root cause of such extremism: misogyny.
A vast majority of Americans believe marijuana should be legalized for recreational and medical use
The study was conducted through the first and second weeks of April 2021.
Billboard advertisements of recreational cannabis may increase problematic use in children
The study was made available online in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol & Drugs.
New survey shows how America’s veteran population is evolving
Gulf War-era veterans now make up the largest portion of veterans within America, survey finds.
Study argues the trade sanctions imposed in response to China’s alleged human rights abuses
The study was published in the Journal of the National Human Rights Commission.
The adoption of extremist ideologies is tied to negative life events
32 participants with a history of radicalization were included.
Preoccupation with online partisan news outlets may result in distrust of mass media
The negative impact on the media was evident even nearly one year after the initial assessment of the participants.
Study finds news outlets are continuing to yank the plug on women’s sports
The inclusion of women's sports is rare among news media outlets, study finds.