3 questions about vodka, answered
Oct 04, 2019 14:42 pm UTC| Insights & Views Health
Towards the end of Ian Flemings spy novel Dr. No, James Bond orders a vodka dry martini Shaken and not stirred please. The novel was published in 1958, at the height of the Cold War. But four decades before the Berlin...

New England power line corridors harbor rare bees and other wild things
Oct 04, 2019 14:42 pm UTC| Insights & Views Nature
To many people, power line corridors are eyesores that alter wild lands and landscapes, even if they are necessary sites for transmission lines that deliver electricity. But ecologically, the swaths of open, scrubby...
America now solves problems with troops, not diplomats
Oct 04, 2019 14:42 pm UTC| Insights & Views
Is America a bully? As a scholar, under the auspices of the Military Intervention Project, I have been studying every episode of U.S. military intervention from 1776 to 2017. Historically, the U.S. advanced from a...

Mining powers modern life, but can leave scarred lands and polluted waters behind
Oct 04, 2019 14:41 pm UTC| Insights & Views
Modern society relies on metals like copper, gold and nickel for uses ranging from medicine to electronics. Most of these elements are rare in Earths crust, so mining them requires displacing vast volumes of dirt and rock....
People are increasingly interrupted at work, but it's not all bad
Oct 04, 2019 14:41 pm UTC| Insights & Views Life
An email pops up on your screen. Its a client sharing a project update. A Slack message appears. Its your boss asking a question. A text alert beeps. A colleague wants to know if you will be attending a meeting. Sound...
How multinationals continue to avoid paying hundreds of billions of dollars in tax – new research
Oct 04, 2019 14:41 pm UTC| Insights & Views Economy
Tax havens have become a defining feature of the global financial system. Multinational companies can use various schemes to avoid paying taxes in countries where they make vast revenues. In new research, my colleague Petr...
Oct 04, 2019 14:40 pm UTC| Insights & Views Science
I can still remember the horror of discovering that everything I had worked on was wrong. I was a PhD candidate just starting my second year, and my supervisor and I had developed a test for rheumatoid arthritis which...