Experts In The News

South China Morning Post

US President Donald Trump’s national security adviser, Robert O’Brien, has tested positive for the coronavirus, the White House said on Monday, as public health officials issued warnings about the contagion’s spread throughout the country.

Law and Crime

The Trump administration on Tuesday announced that it will renew its efforts to rescind the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) policy by directing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to cease accepting any new applications and curtailing renewals for the program.

Business Scholarship Podcast

Benjamin Edwards, associate professor of law at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, joins the Business Scholarship Podcast to discuss his forthcoming article Adversarial Failure. In this article, Edwards examines the expungement process used by brokers to secure removal of customer complaints from their public records. He questions whether this process is sufficiently adversarial to protect the interests of the investing public and state regulators and offers recommendations for reform.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Nevada’s largest public school system’s pandemic plan was last updated in 2009, and some key agencies have refused to release plans for public review, so it’s unclear how prepared officials were for the coronavirus, a Review-Journal analysis has found.

Las Vegas Review Journal

If the Mars Perseverance Rover was lifting off from Cape Canaveral at almost any other time, 51ԹϺ Professor Elisabeth “Libby” Hausrath would have had a front-row seat.

Las Vegas Review Journal

If the Mars Perseverance Rover was lifting off from Cape Canaveral at almost any other time, 51ԹϺ Professor Elisabeth “Libby” Hausrath would have had a front-row seat.

Las Vegas Review Journal

If the Mars Perseverance Rover was lifting off from Cape Canaveral at almost any other time, 51ԹϺ Professor Elisabeth “Libby” Hausrath would have had a front-row seat.

Las Vegas Review Journal

A new study from 51ԹϺ suggests that warm Arctic seas, melting sea ice and a hot Pacific Ocean caused a hot and dry period in the Southwestern United States thousands of years ago, the likes of which have never been experienced by humans.