Plus: Playing video games for health
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Top headlines
Lead story The word “drone” covers a wide range of devices, even if you narrow it down to only drones that fly and even further to military aerial drones. These range from long-distance surveillance drones that fly up to 60,000 feet and cost over $100 million to quadcopters you can buy on Amazon for a few hundred dollars (not counting explosives). The category of these weapons that perhaps has had the greatest effect on warfare is one-way attack drones: those that carry explosives and fly directly into their targets. They include drones that cost tens of thousands of dollars and have been dubbed the “poor man’s cruise missile,” but also remotely piloted off-the-shelf quadcopters that capture video of their journeys in addition to blowing up. Defense researchers Michael C. Horowitz and Lauren Kahn describe how this technology has ushered in a new era in warfare, one that melds the volume of artillery with the long-range accuracy of guided missiles. And they explain how these drones give Iran a boost in confronting the United States. [ Miss us on Sundays? Get a selection of our best and most popular stories (or try our other weekly emails). ] |
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Eric Smalley Science + Technology Editor |
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Iran’s Shahed drone is essentially a poor man’s cruise missile. AP Photo/Efrem Lukatsky
Michael C. Horowitz, University of Pennsylvania; Lauren Kahn, Georgetown University One-way attack drones have changed the face of the Russia-Ukraine war and give Iran a boost in countering US and Israeli forces. |
Economy + Business |
Ana Carolina Garriga, University of Essex; Cristina Bodea, Michigan State University Politicians have long coveted control over monetary policy. Good economic governance requires that they don’t get it.
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Education |
Heather Hensman Kettrey, Clemson University; Heidi Zinzow, Clemson University; Megan Rebecca Fallon, Clemson University Students guessed how their school would handle sexual misconduct based on how their university had previously responded to anti-LGBTQ+ incidents and other kinds of harm.
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International |
Vladimir Chlouba, University of Richmond After the main Namibian party started alternating candidates between men and women, female representation in the National Assembly nearly doubled.
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Ethics + Religion |
Febe Armanios, Middlebury College Satellite television has been a key tool for evangelical churches to reach Christians and potential converts in Iran.
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Politics + Society |
Paul J. Springer, Air University Knowing what comes next in Operation Epic Fury is better understood by grasping the evolution of Iran’s military structure and capabilities.
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Environment + Energy |
Marccus D. Hendricks, University of Maryland The largest sewage spill in US history wasn’t the first, and it won’t be the last.
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Arts + Culture |
Katrina Stack, University of Tennessee; Reagan Yessler, Pellissippi State Community College To what extent has the line between playful community space and commercial spectacle been blurred?
Austin McCoy, West Virginia University Classic songs ‘Nowhere to Run’ and ‘Dancing in the Street’ captured the revolutionary spirit of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s.
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Health + Medicine |
Elena Bertozzi, Quinnipiac University By letting people make choices and experience the outcomes of those choices, gaming provides a much more hands-on way of learning about health.
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Video 📽️ |
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