
Why Anti-Trans Laws Are Anti-Science
Bills that restrict access to gender-affirming health care ignore research

Bills that restrict access to gender-affirming health care ignore research

In the climate crisis, wetlands have more economic value than new development

After Pearl Harbor, 9/11 and other major tragedies, the U.S. has examined itself to see how to prevent the next catastrophe. We need to do the same for the COVID pandemic

Despite years of evidence that starting school later promotes better health and improved grades, too few schools have adopted this measure

Scientific American editors share what scientific events they are paying attention to as 2023 begins

As a dismal year on Earth draws to a close, milestones in space exploration offer much for the whole world to celebrate

Science applies to every important social issue. Saying so doesn’t make us “unscientific”

Some office seekers have positions based on research and facts, whereas others stand on assumptions and bias

The Clean Water Act, a bipartisan piece of legislation that has fundamentally changed water pollution in the U.S., is under attack when it should be strengthened instead

In-school clinics improve well-being and educational outcomes and serve children who need them most

Lessons about racial injustice help students understand reality

Discoveries inspire us, give us hope for a better future and pay off generously

This Supreme Court often ignores science when handing down decisions, and it affects far too many lives

Incentives and remodeling need to be more straightforward and equitable if we expect people to convert their homes away from fossil fuels

The war in Ukraine shows the urgency of nuclear arms control

By enacting simple laws that make guns safer and harder to get, we can prevent killings like the ones in Uvalde and Buffalo

Restricting access to abortion goes against science, safety, and human dignity and portends a dangerous future

Scams and volatility plague this market, and the Biden administration is still trying to decide where the federal government fits in

Evidence shows they boost suffrage, not fraud

Health security is as important to a nation as a standing army
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