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Consolidation Is Eating Our Food Economy
What’s happening to the United States food market is relevant to anyone who makes, sells, or eats food in America. That includes you, writes
Dollars and Censure
Aleta Sprague explains why financial capability is central to financial access—and how some states are denying millions both.
Figures Don’t Lie, but Liars Can Figure
Manuela Ekowo articulates why raw numbers do not equal human-made data.
He’s with Him, She’s with Her. Really, Still?
Patrick Oathout examines how far we have—and have not—come with respect to gender in American politics.
Here’s What’s Going on in Brazil Right Now
We need to understand Brazil’s political past and present to be able to forecast its future, says Chayenne Polimédio.
More Than Tuition: Today’s Students and Institutional Incentives for Setting Yearly Budgets
Even as the media focus is on elite private colleges, 45 percent of students live in households with less than $30,000 a year.
Out Today: Principals’ Perspectives on Teaching and Learning in PreK-3rd
Most models are geared towards building strong teachers, but until recently principals have been left out of the conversation.
Russia’s Going Soft on Georgia…Sort Of
Soft power, that is, argues Mirian Jugheli.
The University of Phoenix Was Right: Forcing Students to Agree to Binding Arbitration is Unfair
In 2004, the University of Phoenix (UOP), the largest for-profit college in the country, took a principled stand on behalf of its students.