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The Conversation

Goodwill created a new high school for dropouts − it led to better jobs and higher wages

  • Written by Patrick Turner, Associate Research Professor of Economics, University of Notre Dame
imageGraduates found jobs in high-paying sectors, new research shows.izusek/E+ via Getty Images

When Goodwill of Central and Southern Indiana realized most of the clients in its job-training program lacked a high school diploma, it set out to address the issue.

In 2010, with the help of per-pupil funding from the state, the nonprofit opened The Excel...

Read more: Goodwill created a new high school for dropouts − it led to better jobs and higher wages

A weakened Hezbollah is being goaded into all-out conflict with Israel – the consequences would be devastating for all

  • Written by Asher Kaufman, Professor of History and Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame

For almost a year, Israel and Hezbollah have engaged in increasingly provocative cross-border skirmishes as onlookers warn that this escalating war of attrition could land the region in all-out conflict. The past few days have made that devastating scenario closer to a reality.

First came Israel’s pager and walkie-talkie attack, an...

Read more: A weakened Hezbollah is being goaded into all-out conflict with Israel – the consequences would be...

Why can’t it always be summer? It’s all about the Earth’s tilt

  • Written by Stephanie Spera, Assistant Professor of Geography and the Environment, University of Richmond
imageOne hemisphere has summer, while the opposite has winter.Prasit photo/Moment via Getty Imagesimage

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


Why can’t it always be summer? – Amanda, age 5, Chile


With its long days just itching to...

Read more: Why can’t it always be summer? It’s all about the Earth’s tilt

Gentrification isn’t inevitable − it can hinge on how residents view their neighborhood

  • Written by Elizabeth Korver-Glenn, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
imageFamilies on bikes at a July Fourth parade in Houston's Northside neighborhood.Jimmy Castillo, CC BY-ND

Gentrification has become a familiar story in cities across the United States. The story line typically goes this way: Middle- and upper-income people start moving into a lower-income or poor neighborhood. Housing prices rise in response, and longt...

Read more: Gentrification isn’t inevitable − it can hinge on how residents view their neighborhood

Trump and Harris vocabularies signal their different frames of mind

  • Written by Patricia Friedrich, Vice Provost and Professor of Sociolinguistics, Arizona State University
imageThe debate between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris revealed more about each person in what they said and how they said it.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

In their campaigns, former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris project different emotions and moods. The contrast between them was particularly sharp during their debate on Sept. 10, 2024....

Read more: Trump and Harris vocabularies signal their different frames of mind

Men are carrying the brunt of the ‘loneliness epidemic’ amid potent societal pressures

  • Written by Alvin Thomas, Associate Professor, Phyllis Northway Faculty Fellow, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageSinger Justin Bieber is seen on May 16, 2024, in Los Angeles.BG046/Bauer-Griffin/GC Images

A few weeks before Justin Bieber and his wife, Hailey, announced in May 2024 that they were expecting, the pop icon posted a selfie where he appears tearful and distraught.

While media attention quickly pivoted to the pregnancy, there was little attention paid...

Read more: Men are carrying the brunt of the ‘loneliness epidemic’ amid potent societal pressures

Wind phones help the bereaved deal with death, loss and grief − a clinical social worker explains the vital role of the old-fashioned rotary phone

  • Written by Taryn Lindhorst, Professor of Social Work, University of Washington
imageThe first wind phone was built in 2010 in Otsuchi, Japan.Matthew Komatsu/Wikimedia Commons

My mother died in my home in hospice in 2020, on the day my state of Washington went into COVID-19 lockdown. Her body was taken away, but none of the usual touchstones for grief were available to our family. There was no funeral or supportive gathering, no...

Read more: Wind phones help the bereaved deal with death, loss and grief − a clinical social worker explains...

Half of Black gay men will be diagnosed with HIV, despite highly effective preventive treatments − why?

  • Written by Oluwafemi Atanda Adeagbo, Assistant Professor of Public Health, University of Iowa
imageStigma and prejudice make it difficult for Black gay men to access PrEP.Willie B. Thomas/DigitalVision via Getty Images

At a pharmacy in Iowa, a 42-year-old Black gay man couldn’t find a medication he needed. The pharmacist, a white woman, told him they didn’t stock that medication. But while he waited to pay for his other purchases, he...

Read more: Half of Black gay men will be diagnosed with HIV, despite highly effective preventive treatments −...

College can be confusing for first-generation students – but it doesn’t have to be

  • Written by Blake R. Silver, Associate Professor of Sociology, George Mason University
imageMany college students are reluctant to ask for help even when they know they need it.Ariel Skelley/DigitalVision via Getty Images

In his new book, “Degrees of Risk: Navigating Insecurity and Inequality in Public Higher Education,” sociology professor Blake R. Silver examines some of many ways that college students can slip through the...

Read more: College can be confusing for first-generation students – but it doesn’t have to be

Self-forgiveness is more than self-comfort − a philosopher explains

  • Written by Mordechai Gordon, Professor of Education, Quinnipiac University
imageForgiving yourself can be a sign of moral growth − but only if you put in the work.Stephanie Verhart/E+ via Getty Images

As the Jewish High Holidays approach, which begin with Rosh Hashanah and continue with Yom Kippur, the theme of forgiveness keeps coming to my mind.

The 10 days from Rosh Hashanah to Yom Kippur are referred to in the Jewish...

Read more: Self-forgiveness is more than self-comfort − a philosopher explains

More Articles ...

  1. Nepal’s revamped truth commissions will need to go beyond ‘ritualism’ to deliver justice to civil war victims
  2. Rare Florida fossil finally ends debate about how porcupine jaws and tails evolved
  3. Pager attack on Hezbollah was a sophisticated ‘booby-trap’ operation − it was also illegal
  4. Immigrants are unsung heroes of global trade and value creation
  5. How Israel’s Netanyahu survives in his job
  6. Why the cost of water for poor Black Detroit voters may be key to Kamala Harris winning – or losing – Michigan
  7. Invasive caterpillars can make aspen forests more toxic for native insects – a team of ecologists explains how
  8. TRUTH in Labeling Act would heighten the warning for shoppers looking to cut sugar, salt and saturated fat intake
  9. You want to vote in the 2024 election − here is how to make sure that your voice is heard
  10. 50 years after the first procedure, Tommy John surgery is more common than ever − especially for young athletes
  11. Collaboratively imagining the future can bring people closer together in the present
  12. Fed slashes rates by a half-point – what that means for the economy and the presidential election
  13. Pagers and walkie-talkies over cellphones – a security expert explains why Hezbollah went low-tech for communications
  14. Preventive care is free by law, but many Americans get incorrectly billed − especially if you’re poor, a person of color or don’t have a college degree
  15. What the jet stream and climate change had to do with the hottest summer on record − remember all those heat domes?
  16. What James Earl Jones can teach us about activism and art in times of crisis
  17. To American revolutionaries, patriotism meant fair dealing with one another
  18. UN’s pact to protect future generations will be undermined by Security Council’s veto and its use in cases of mass atrocity
  19. Why Pennsylvania is the key to a Harris or Trump Electoral College victory
  20. Young professionals are struggling to socially adapt in the workplace – educators can help
  21. Abortion rights are on 10 state ballots in November − Democrats can’t count on this to win elections for them
  22. How the Israeli settlers movement shaped modern Israel
  23. Eviction filings can destabilize tenants’ lives – even when they win their case
  24. Trump’s second assassination attempt is shocking, but attempts on presidents’ lives are not rare in US history
  25. Happiness swings votes – and America’s current mood could scramble expectations of young and old voters
  26. Why holding kids back fails − and what to do about it
  27. Denver’s experiment in providing a soft landing for newly arrived migrants and asylum-seekers isn’t cheap – but doing nothing might cost more
  28. Lost in translation: What spirituality and Einstein’s theory of time have to do with misunderstandings about climate change
  29. Health care under Harris versus Trump: A public health historian sizes up their records
  30. ‘They’re eating pets’ – another example of US politicians smearing Haiti and Haitian immigrants
  31. Tiny robots and AI algorithms could help to craft material solutions for cleaner environments
  32. TikTok ban goes to the court: 5 essential reads on the case and its consequences
  33. America’s dairy farms are disappearing, down 95% since the 1970s − milk price rules are one reason why
  34. Class and race can create divides between donors and a cause they support − putting stress on those nonprofits
  35. Empowering engineering students through storytelling
  36. Women are still underrepresented in local government, despite a woman running for president
  37. Pennsylvania’s mail-in ballot system has a problem − but it’s not what Trump is making unfounded claims about
  38. Intoxication nation: a double shot of US history
  39. Will your phone one day let you smell as well as see and hear what’s on the other end of a call?
  40. What are halal mortgages?
  41. How researchers measure wildfire smoke exposure doesn’t capture long-term health effects − and hides racial disparities
  42. Plants get a GMO glow-up: Genetically modified varieties are coming out of the lab and into homes and gardens
  43. Vatican News: How to Stay Informed on the Global Religious Landscape
  44. Students ride the rails in this course to learn about sustainability and tourism
  45. Creative life after death − or yes, you can control spinoffs from beyond the grave
  46. Sunflowers make small moves to maximize their Sun exposure − physicists can model them to predict how they grow
  47. Voters’ ‘moral flexibility’ helps them defend politicians’ misinformation − if they believe the inaccurate info speaks to a larger truth
  48. Wild ginseng is declining, but small-scale ‘diggers’ aren’t the main threat to this native plant − and they can help save it
  49. Colorado voters weigh a ban on hunting mountain lions as attitudes toward wild predators shift
  50. Endometriosis pain leads to missed school and work in two-thirds of women with the condition, new study finds