Funding to clean up orphaned oil, gas wells is on the way
Two Binghamton University professors have been working to solve the problem of tracking down abandoned wells with newly developed drone technology, Sierra magazine reports. Read more
More than ‘Squid Game:’ the international rise of K-dramas
Binghamton University scholar Robert Ku and others discuss Korean dramas such as “Squid Game” on the radio program 1A this week. Read more
Christian schools boom in a revolt against curriculum, pandemic rules
A boom in conservative Christian schooling appears to be driven nationwide by a combination of pandemic frustrations and rising parental anxieties around how schools handle education on issues including race and the rights of transgender students, the New York Times reports, quoting Binghamton historian Adam Laats and others. Read more
Why we share stories of local ghosts
Communities have always circulated tales of nearby spirits that are attached to specific spaces and carry memorable lessons, Binghamton scholar Elizabeth Tucker and other folklorists tell Discover Magazine. Read more
Can skeletons have a racial identity?
In recent years, a growing number of forensic anthropologists, including Binghamton scholar Liz DiGangi, have grown critical of ancestry estimation and want to replace it with something more nuanced, The New York Times reports. Read more
How to use science to focus at work
Quit kidding yourself that you can multitask, Binghamton psychologist Nicholas Gaspelin tells Wired. Read more
How school boards became battlegrounds for culture wars
“The history of school board politics is a great way to chart the career of all culture war issues,” Binghamton historian Adam Laats tells The Guardian. “School boards made perfect battlefields.” Read more