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The Conversation

LGBT equality doesn't exist – but here's how to fight for it

  • Written by David Miller, Doctoral Student in Psychology, Northwestern University

When I came out as gay in my sophomore year of college, I absolutely loved going to Tigerheat – a kitschy 18-and-over gay club in Los Angeles. I mostly remember my nights there as frivolous fun, but they also had deeper meaning. That’s where I first learned how to openly and unabashedly celebrate being gay.

I danced wildly to Britney...

Read more: LGBT equality doesn't exist – but here's how to fight for it

The Orlando shooting: exploring the link between hate crimes and terrorism

  • Written by Joshua D. Freilich, Professor of Criminal Justice, City University of New York

Some are calling the mass shooting at an Orlando gay nightclub an act of terrorism. Others are calling it a hate crime against the LGBT community. President Obama declared it an “act of terror and an act of hate.”

Can it be both?

It’s an important question. How extremist crimes are labeled by officials directly affects how...

Read more: The Orlando shooting: exploring the link between hate crimes and terrorism

How did Brazil go from rising BRIC to sinking ship?

  • Written by Steven M. Helfand, Associate Professor of Economics, University of California, Riverside
imageBrazil's economy was once considered ready to take flight. What happened?

Most of the headlines in recent weeks have focused on Brazil’s troubling political crisis. But the country is also in the midst of a deep economic recession.

The economy has been shrinking since the second quarter of 2014. It contracted by 3.8 percent in 2015 and is...

Read more: How did Brazil go from rising BRIC to sinking ship?

Fathers also want to ‘have it all,’ study says

  • Written by Gayle Kaufman, Professor of Sociology, Davidson College
imageDads need support, too.CC BY-SA

Have you seen the T-shirt slogan: Dads don’t babysit (it’s called “parenting”)?

This slogan calls out the gendered language we often still use to talk about fathers. Babysitters are temporary caregivers who step in to help out the parents. But the fact is that fathers are spending more time...

Read more: Fathers also want to ‘have it all,’ study says

The truth about for-profit colleges and Trump University

  • Written by Kevin Kinser, Associate Professor of Education, University at Albany, State University of New York

Documents released in a federal lawsuit against Trump University have put presumptive Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump on the defensive. Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton is now highlighting the fraud that is at the center of the case.

In the process, many commentators are identifying the Trump University business model as further...

Read more: The truth about for-profit colleges and Trump University

48 hours as a Muslim American: A professor reflects

  • Written by Mohammad Hassan Khalil, Associate Professor of Religious Studies and Director of the Muslim Studies program, Michigan State University

What a difference 48 hours can make.

Last Friday afternoon, before a global audience, former president Bill Clinton (a Christian) and comedian Billy Crystal (a Jew) eulogized “the Greatest,” the most famous Muslim American of all time, Muhammad Ali.

The televised audience also took in Islamic invocations, recitations from the...

Read more: 48 hours as a Muslim American: A professor reflects

Graphene isn’t the only Lego in the materials-science toy box

  • Written by Peter Byrley, Ph.D. Candidate in Chemical Engineering, University of California, Riverside
imageMaterials science has lots of options for building.dolske/flickr, CC BY-SA

You may have heard of graphene, a sheet of pure carbon, one atom thick, that’s all the rage in materials-science circles, and getting plenty of media hype as well. Reports have trumpeted graphene as an ultra-thin, super-strong, super-conductive, super-flexible...

Read more: Graphene isn’t the only Lego in the materials-science toy box

How can hospitals possibly prepare for disasters? With practice and planning

  • Written by Sam Shartar, Senior Administrator Office of Critical Event Preparedness and Response, Emory University

The tragic shooting in Orlando brought dozens of victims to emergency rooms. Now, several of those people have been admitted and are clinging to life. Many across the nation are praying for them and other victims. Without quick response and high-quality emergency medical care, many more than the 49 already reported may have died.

Emergency room...

Read more: How can hospitals possibly prepare for disasters? With practice and planning

Social media is changing our digital news habits – but to varying degrees in US and UK

  • Written by David Levy, Director of the Reuters Institute for the Study of Journalism, University of Oxford
imageSame news, different medium?Elvin, CC BY-NC

Digital technology has dramatically reshaped the news and media industries in the past decade. We’ve left behind a world where established news brands could rely on reaching large audiences and hence secure advertising revenues. Now there is huge uncertainty about business models, even as digital...

Read more: Social media is changing our digital news habits – but to varying degrees in US and UK

Finding Nemo – and Dory – is easy. Deciding whether they should be pets is harder

  • Written by Michael Tlusty, Research Faculty, University of Massachusetts Boston
imageUnlike clownfish (Nemo), Pacific blue tang fish (Dory) cannot be bred in captivity. nostri-imago/flickr, CC BY

Coral reefs across the globe are under threat from climate change. Fishing of any kind is often seen as a further assault on these ecosystems, and any perceived increase in fishing, especially when not for subsistence, is often met with...

Read more: Finding Nemo – and Dory – is easy. Deciding whether they should be pets is harder

More Articles ...

  1. Two violent men, two symptoms of the same sickness
  2. Another mass shooting – what the experts say
  3. Gun researchers see a public health emergency in Orlando mass shooting. Here's why.
  4. Terrorism and tourism: what cities should do to prepare for an attack
  5. Were this year's Tony Awards only a superficial nod to diversity?
  6. Does China manipulate its currency as Donald Trump claims?
  7. New atlas shows extent of light pollution -- what does it mean for our health?
  8. Climate change could alter the chemistry of deepwater lakes and harm ecosystems
  9. Fighting malevolent AI: artificial intelligence, meet cybersecurity
  10. Personal beliefs versus scientific innovation: getting past a flat Earth mentality
  11. Aid to dying: What Jainism -- one of India's oldest religions -- teaches us
  12. How might drone racing drive innovation?
  13. Californians now have right to 'aid in dying': How did we get here?
  14. Can Jude Law's 'Genius' capture the essence of Thomas Wolfe?
  15. Putting CO2 away for good by turning it into stone
  16. Technology is improving – why is rural broadband access still a problem?
  17. How Hillary Clinton's 'smart power' feminism informs her foreign policy
  18. Are some students more at risk of assault on campuses?
  19. Campuses aren't safe. Are universities doing enough?
  20. Are you getting the best health care? Evidence says: maybe not
  21. Trump's 'America First': echoes from 1940s
  22. Clinton seizes on environmental justice but progress requires deep reforms
  23. How Bernie Sanders can still become president
  24. Saturated fats make some cells lose track of time -- and that's bad
  25. Why the Deep Space Atomic Clock is key for future space exploration
  26. Are pop stars destined to die young?
  27. Three female scholars react to Hillary Clinton's historic nomination
  28. How fish and clean water can protect coral reefs from warming oceans
  29. Are we in the midst of a public space crisis?
  30. Using computers to better understand art
  31. We behave a lot more badly than we remember
  32. How the Antiquities Act has expanded the national park system and fueled struggles over land protection
  33. Rules change, new voters mean an unpredictable primary day in California
  34. What are septic shock and sepsis? The facts behind these deadly conditions
  35. Is it time to break with colonial legacy of zoos?
  36. The Puerto Rican primary matters. Here's why
  37. Stories of vaccine-related harms are influential, even when people don't believe them
  38. We’re (not) running out of water -- a better way to measure water scarcity
  39. Obsessed with reality TV? You may be a narcissist
  40. Why young people aren't keeping up: from the Joneses to the Kardashians
  41. Why are public colleges and universities enrolling too many out-of-state students?
  42. Limiting access to payday loans may do more harm than good
  43. Weak jobs report shows we need a president with a plan, but it's too soon to panic
  44. Google wins in court, and so does losing party Oracle
  45. Gorilla’s death calls for human responsibility, not animal personhood
  46. Is OPEC's oil era over?
  47. Moving beyond pro/con debates over genetically engineered crops
  48. Using lasers to make data storage faster than ever
  49. Why music lessons need to keep up with the times
  50. What is chronic pain and why is it hard to treat?