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All-Cash Home Buyers Pay 10% Less Than Mortgage Buyers
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All-Cash Home Buyers Pay 10% Less Than Mortgage Buyers

Owning a home has long been considered a crucial way to build wealth, but making such a purchase has become increasingly difficult for many residents. In addition to steep housing prices and high interest rates, there have been a growing number of all-cash buyers who can close a deal quickly, beating out competing offers from buyers who...

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What Congress Should Do About Hate Crime Statistics

To improve hate crime statistics, Congress should amend existing legislation, not impose hate crime reporting mandates. A new bipartisan bill in Congress would require police in major American cities to prioritize hate crime reporting as a condition of receiving grants under a popular federal program. That bill, the Improving Reporting to Prevent Hate Act, is the...

Wide Variation in Rates of Police Killings Suggests Unnecessary Deaths
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Wide Variation in Rates of Police Killings Suggests Unnecessary Deaths

One in three police homicides could have been avoided without endangering police or the public, according to a study. Eight percent of all homicides of adult men in the United States are committed by police. Using data from 2008–2017 from the National Officer-Involved Homicide Database, Josh Leung-Gagné compared police homicide rates across the 711 local...

Reinforcing the Diverse Ways People Access Seafood Can Ensure Healthy Communities in the Face of Change
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Reinforcing the Diverse Ways People Access Seafood Can Ensure Healthy Communities in the Face of Change

As climate change affects the oceans, coastal communities, particularly those at the front lines of ocean warming and sea level rise, are facing pressures that could threaten their access to aquatic foods. “Climate change and other economic shocks are impacting how people access seafood, and typically households that are most reliant on seafood, such as...

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As Cities Grow, How Will City Trash, Wastewater, and Emissions Rise?

More than half of the world’s population—4.4 billion people—lives in cities, and that proportion will grow to two-thirds by the year 2050, according to the United Nations. As the world’s population expands, and becomes increasingly urbanized, many have raised concerns about the impact of waste—from house trash to wastewater to greenhouse gas emissions—on the planet....

Food from Urban Agriculture Has Carbon Footprint 6 Times Larger Than Conventional Produce
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Food from Urban Agriculture Has Carbon Footprint 6 Times Larger Than Conventional Produce

A new University of Michigan-led international study finds that fruits and vegetables grown in urban farms and gardens have a carbon footprint that is, on average, six times greater than conventionally grown produce. However, a few city-grown crops equaled or outperformed conventional agriculture under certain conditions. Tomatoes grown in the soil of open-air urban plots...

A Statewide Survey Shows the Digital Divide Narrowing in California, but Many Low-Income Residents Remain Under-Connected
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A Statewide Survey Shows the Digital Divide Narrowing in California, but Many Low-Income Residents Remain Under-Connected

Statewide broadband adoption remains high with 91% of households in California enjoying high-speed internet access at home, according to new survey results released today by USC, the California Emerging Technology Fund and the California Department of Technology. The overall findings are consistent with the 2021 results of the biennial Statewide Digital Equity Survey, which monitors Californians’ digital access. The...

College Applications Rose in States That Legalized Recreational Marijuana
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College Applications Rose in States That Legalized Recreational Marijuana

Colleges in states where recreational marijuana became legal over the past decade saw a significant but short-term boost in applications from top-notch students. They also got more applications overall. Those were the key findings of a new study our team published recently in the peer-reviewed journal Contemporary Economic Policy. In the year that a particular...

Understanding Climate Mobilities: New Study Examines Perspectives from South Florida Practitioners
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Understanding Climate Mobilities: New Study Examines Perspectives from South Florida Practitioners

Understanding Climate Mobilities: New study examines perspectives from South Florida practitioners As climate change continues to impact people across South Florida, the need for adaptive responses becomes increasingly important. A recent study led by researchers at the University of Miami Rosenstiel School of Marine, Atmospheric, and Earth Science, assessed the perspectives of 76 diverse South...