Experts In The News
A planned $5 billion medical campus in North Las Vegas is coming back under the direction of city government two years after the project was announced.
Tope is one of the thousands of job seekers who exemplify Nevada’s changing labor force and how it reflects U.S. officials’ larger goals to tamp out inflation without causing a recession. Economists and decision-makers at the Federal Reserve are watching the labor market for clues.
Professor Brett Abarbanel, Executive Director of the 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ International Gaming Institute, recaps the recent history of sports betting and forecasts its potentially problematic future. Plus, are young people even cognitively capable of making smart bets?
Antecedents of racist treatments of Black patients by the psychiatric profession in the United States affect the way they view treatment today. Specifically, in this essay, we explore the enduring consequences of racial science on various treatment practices.
51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ announced on Tuesday that the building where four people were shot last December will be reopening for the upcoming fall semester.
On the steps of Capitol Hill, we meet the scientists bringing their scientific battle against malaria into the world of political advocacy. They join a 100+ group of advocates lobbying their members of Congress to fund critical interventions against malaria – becoming ‘malaria champions’ as well.
Classes are expected to resume in the fall at the 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ building where four staff members were shot last December. That's according to the latest "Rebel Recovery Update" from university president Keith E. Whitfield.
The 51³Ô¹ÏºÚÁÏ building where three professors were killed in a shooting last year will reopen amid heightened security for the fall semester, university President Keith Whitfield announced Tuesday.