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What South Korea’s short-lived martial law says about nation’s democracy and the autocratic tendencies of President Yoon  Author: Myunghee Lee, Assistant Professor, Michigan State University

What short-lived martial law says about South Korean democracy and the position of President Yoon Myunghee Lee, Assistant Professor, Michigan State University

America’s counties are less purple than they used to be Robert J. Vanderbei, Professor of Operations Research and Financial Engineering, Princeton University

Looking at county election results shows the geography of America's partisan divide. Robert Vanderbei The United States isn’t mostly red...

Notre Dame reopens in Paris 5 years after fire – its reconstruction preserves the past and illuminates France’s modern ambitions Irit Kleiman, Associate Professor of Romance Studies, Boston University

AI Jesus might ‘listen’ to your confession, but it can’t absolve your sins − a scholar of Catholicism explains Joanne M. Pierce, Professor Emerita of Religious Studies, College of the Holy Cross

One’s a Hugh Grant thriller, one’s a hot-mess reality show – and both center on stereotypes about Mormon women Rebecca Janzen, Professor of Spanish and Comparative Literature, University of South Carolina

New IRS funding boosted tax enforcement and improved taxpayer services during the Biden administration Ryan Polk, Assistant Professor of Accountancy, Clemson University

IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel testified before Congress in February 2024. Matt McClain/The Washington Post via Getty Images The Internal Revenue...

We surveyed hundreds of vacationers to confirm this ancient wisdom: The journey matters as much as the destination Mark R. Gleim, Associate Professor of Marketing, Auburn University

This waiting isn't the hardest part. Anthony Devlin/Getty Images Americans spent more than US$850 billion on domestic leisure travel in...