In the News
-
April 12, 2022
“It felt like ‘Back to the Future’ all over again, where you have legislators who are trying to position themselves at a point where there’s demand for more oil and gas production fast — and lower prices. And in this case, things like greenhouse gas emissions seemingly go out the window,” said Barry Rabe, professor of public policy and the environment, on Democrats’ recent calls for oil companies to ramp up production.
E&E News -
April 12, 2022
“I’m falling on the ‘seems like a bad idea right now’ side of things, at least on surface value,” said Sarita Schoenebeck, associate professor of information, who is concerned that Twitter’s plans to include an edit button will cause confusion. “I don’t think, from an interface design perspective, it would make it clear what the trajectory of a tweet was.”
WIRED -
April 12, 2022
“The Department of Justice has rarely lost high-profile counterterrorism cases based on successful entrapment claims, and this development punches a hole in that relatively unblemished track record the past two decades,” said Javed Ali, associate professor of practice in public policy, on a jury’s failure to convict four suspects in an alleged plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer.
ABC News -
April 11, 2022
The 5% decline in the U.S. Census Bureau’s 2020 count of Detroit’s population made the city an “outlier” among major U.S. cities, said Jeffrey Morenoff, professor of sociology and public policy. A mix of factors, including a late start and underresourced Census teams, likely led to the undercount, “but it is fair to say that people of color, especially Blacks and Latinos nationwide, have probably been undercounted, more so than others.”
Michigan Radio -
April 11, 2022
The way flu vaccines are updated each year could be a model for the future of coronavirus vaccines, says Oveta Fuller, associate professor of microbiology and immunology and a member of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s coronavirus advisory committee: “We need to remind ourselves … that we are very new in this pandemic. … The important thing here is that the public understands how complex this is.”
CNN -
April 11, 2022
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission could argue that Elon Musk, who delayed disclosure of his stake in Twitter and may have earned $156 million, needs to part with the theoretical profit, but that would be a long shot, said Adam Pritchard, professor of law.
The Washington Post -
April 8, 2022
Investing in college savings accounts has positive effects on the social emotional development of kids and parental practices of lower-income households, says William Elliott III, professor of social work: “What assets give you is tangible hope. … Nobody wants to toil every day just to be able to find a way to eat — they want to have a stake in their future.” Terri Friedline, associate professor of social work, says CSAs help kids “build this future orientation and thinking about college and having that be a possible future for themselves.”
The Guardian -
April 8, 2022
“One of the things that’s really important to me is that as a society, we really start thinking about … promoting lung health,” said Meilan Han, professor of pulmonary and critical care. “The tricky part is that lung disease before the pandemic was already significantly underdiagnosed in this country; it’s not something we routinely screened for. Ultimately, we need to make diagnosing lung disease and understanding lung injury a much bigger national priority.”
WDIV/Detroit -
April 8, 2022
Research by Joshua Newell, associate professor of environment and sustainability, shows that just 1 percent of the vacant land in Detroit’s Lower Eastside is made up of private and community gardens. One reason there are not more gardens, he says, is uncertainty about whether the land can be used: “It’s hard to justify putting in a lot of infrastructure if you don’t know if you’re going to have that lot to use five years down the road.”
Michigan Radio -
April 7, 2022
While nitrogen pollution in the atmosphere may help maple tree growth in the U.S., it isn’t expected to offset the struggles the trees will face due to climate change, says Inés Ibáñez, professor of environment and sustainability, and ecology and evolutionary biology: “We consider that to be a pollutant but from the point of view of a plant, it’s almost a fertilizer, but it’s not enough to compensate for the warmer temperatures.”
MLive