Experts In The News
Only a fraction of the thousands of formerly incarcerated people whose voting rights were restored in time for the 2020 election made it back on the voter rolls in four key states — Nevada, Kentucky, Iowa and New Jersey, a Marshall Project analysis found.
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Climate change is making hot summer days more common and more pronounced. The way we experience hot summer days goes beyond any one number.
![Kristen Averyt Headshot Kristen Averyt Headshot](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/Averyt%20Expert.jpg?itok=Qm6no8Zb)
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Part of our concept of "home" is as a place of refuge from the outside world. It's somewhere we can feel both physically and psychologically secure.
![Dak Kopec Headshot Dak Kopec Headshot](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/Kopec-Headshot.jpg?itok=1rrqJgtA)
Ammon Bundy became infamous in 2014 when he was involved in an armed standoff with federal officials in Nevada, where his father, rancher Cliven Bundy, refused to pay grazing fees.
![Headshot of Robert Futrell](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/dl_D68857_26.jpg?itok=VTeEjzw8)
Police dog bites send thousands of people to emergency rooms every year.
![Headshot of Tyler D. Parry](/sites/default/files/styles/60_width/public/experts/highres/Photo%20Profile.jpg?itok=jymiqlNI)
Only a fraction of the thousands of formerly incarcerated people whose voting rights were restored in time for the 2020 election made it back on to the voter rolls in four key states – Nevada, Kentucky, Iowa and New Jersey, a Marshall Project analysis found.
![U.S.A. Today](/sites/default/files/styles/100_width_25_height/public/news_source/logo/USA_Today_logo.png?itok=-oyGUFa-)
At least 13 states have expanded voting rights for people with felony convictions between 2016 and 2020. As a result, millions of formerly incarcerated people across the country are now eligible to vote.
![M.S.N.](/sites/default/files/styles/100_width_25_height/public/news_source/logo/2015_MSN_logo.svg_.png?itok=gWypQ2Oh)
At least 13 states have expanded voting rights for people with felony convictions between 2016 and 2020. As a result, millions of formerly incarcerated people across the country are now eligible to vote.