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Are sanctuary policing policies no more than a public relations facade?

  • Written by Nick Lehr, Senior Arts + Culture Editor, The Conversation
imageFederal agents in military fatigues chat with Chicago police officers in Chicago's Brighton Park neighborhood on Oct. 4, 2025, after federal agents shot a woman during a confrontation.Joshua Lott/The Washington Post via Getty Images

In early 2025, in an effort to facilitate its deportation goals, the Trump administration entered into hundreds of...

Read more: Are sanctuary policing policies no more than a public relations facade?

How keeping down borrowing costs for mortgages and other loans is built into the Fed’s ‘dual mandate’

  • Written by Arabinda Basistha, Associate Professor of Economics, West Virginia University
imageHome borrowing costs, like other long-term rates, are not directly controlled by the Fed – but they still feel its influence.athima tongloom/Moment via Getty Images

What’s the point of monetary policy?

For most of us, the main impact tends to be how much we have to pay to borrow to buy a house or car. But for the Federal Reserve, the...

Read more: How keeping down borrowing costs for mortgages and other loans is built into the Fed’s ‘dual...

Netflix-Warner deal would drive streaming market further down the road of ‘Big 3’ domination

  • Written by David R. King, Higdon Professor of Management, Florida State University
imageNetflix's Hollywood studio offices at Sunset Bronson Studios in Los Angeles.Patrick T. Fallon / AFP via Getty Images

When it comes to major U.S. industries, three tends to be the magic number.

Historically, auto manufacturing was long dominated by Chrysler, Ford and General Motors – the so-called “Big Three,” which at one point...

Read more: Netflix-Warner deal would drive streaming market further down the road of ‘Big 3’ domination

What 38 million obituaries reveal about how Americans define a ‘life well lived’

  • Written by Stylianos Syropoulos, Assistant Professor of Psychology, Arizona State University
imageObituaries provide a window into the prevailing traditions and moral values of their time.alexmillos/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Obituaries preserve what families most want remembered about the people they cherish most. Across time, they also reveal the values each era chose to honor.

In a study published in the journal Proceedings of the National...

Read more: What 38 million obituaries reveal about how Americans define a ‘life well lived’

Florida’s new reporting system is shining a light on human trafficking in the Sunshine State

  • Written by Shelly M. Wagers, Associate Professor of Criminology, University of South Florida
imageHuman trafficking can be hard to track because it is a crime that hides in plain sight.Mireya Acierto/Photodisc via Getty Images

Most Americans imagine human trafficking as a violent kidnapping or a “stranger danger” crime – someone abducted from a parking lot or trapped in a shipping container brought in from another country.

In...

Read more: Florida’s new reporting system is shining a light on human trafficking in the Sunshine State

What does it mean to be a new national park? Ocmulgee Mounds in Georgia may soon find out

  • Written by Seth T. Kannarr, Ph.D. Candidate in Geography, University of Tennessee
imageEarth Lodge at Ocmulgee Mounds shows an example of earthworks that are over 1,000 years old.Skhamse1 via Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Ocmulgee Mounds, a site in central Georgia with 12,000 years of Indigenous history, may be on the verge of becoming the newest U.S. national park. This is the flagship designation of the National Park Service system,...

Read more: What does it mean to be a new national park? Ocmulgee Mounds in Georgia may soon find out

The law meets its limits – what ‘Nuremberg’ reveals about guilt, evil and the quest for global justice

  • Written by B.B. Blaber, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Grinnell College
imageLeading Nazi figures were tried for war crimes at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg, Germany.Raymond D'Addario/Galerie Bilderwelt/Getty Images

The film “Nuremberg” depicts events surrounding the post-World War II International Military Tribunal – the first and best-known of the Nuremberg trials – which was...

Read more: The law meets its limits – what ‘Nuremberg’ reveals about guilt, evil and the quest for global...

Why can’t I wiggle my toes one at a time, like my fingers?

  • Written by Steven Lautzenheiser, Assistant Professor of Biological Anthropology, University of Tennessee
imageA baby chimp can grab a stick equally well with its fingers and its toes.Anup Shah/Stone via Getty Images

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 I wiggle my toes individually, like I can with my fingers? –...

Read more: Why can’t I wiggle my toes one at a time, like my fingers?

Putting pig organs in people is OK in the US, but growing human organs in pigs is not – why is that?

  • Written by Monika Piotrowska, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University at Albany, State University of New York
imageWhile research on human-pig chimeras is on an indefinite pause, xenotransplantation is moving ahead.wildpixel/iStock via Getty Images Plus

In a Maryland operating room one day in November 2025, doctors made medical history by transplanting a genetically modified pig kidney into a living patient. The kidney had been engineered to mimic human tissue...

Read more: Putting pig organs in people is OK in the US, but growing human organs in pigs is not – why is that?

From evil to upheaval and beyond: How the ‘axis’ metaphor shaped modern geopolitics

  • Written by Andrew Latham, Professor of Political Science, Macalester College
imageThe world spins on its axis.iStock/Getty Images Plus

The plural of “axis” is “axes,” apparently. And foreign policy types with axes to grind have been making good use of this other meaning, too.

Earlier this year, academic Walter Russell Mead warned in his Wall Street Journal column of the threat from the “axis of...

Read more: From evil to upheaval and beyond: How the ‘axis’ metaphor shaped modern geopolitics

More Articles ...

  1. Supreme Court’s decision on birthright citizenship will depend on its interpretation of one key phrase
  2. Vaccine committee votes to scrap universal hepatitis B shots for newborns despite outcry from children’s health experts
  3. 3 states are challenging precedent against posting the Ten Commandments in public schools – cases that could land back at the Supreme Court
  4. A culinary educator and local dining expert breaks down Michelin’s debut Philly list − and gives zero stars to the inspectors
  5. Girls and boys solve math problems differently – with similar short-term results but different long-term outcomes
  6. 2025’s words of the year reflect a year of digital disillusionment
  7. Buying a gift for a loved one with cancer? Here’s why you should skip the fuzzy socks and give them meals or help with laundry instead
  8. Far-right extremists have been organizing online since before the internet – and AI is their next frontier
  9. ‘Yes’ to God, but ‘no’ to church – what religious change looks like for many Latin Americans
  10. Hope and hardship have driven Syrian refugee returns – but many head back to destroyed homes, land disputes
  11. Pete Hegseth could be investigated for illegal orders by 5 different bodies – but none are likely to lead to charges
  12. Measuring Colorado’s mountains one hike at a time
  13. Tired of the same old Christmas songs? So were these countercultural carolers
  14. Meditating on the connectedness of life could help reunite a divided country – here’s how ‘interbeing’ works
  15. Down-ranking polarizing content lowers emotional temperature on social media – new research
  16. Most normal matter in the universe isn’t found in planets, stars or galaxies – an astronomer explains where it’s distributed
  17. Facing myriad global pressures, Iran intensifies outreach to African partners for critical needs
  18. People who talk with their hands seem more clear and persuasive – new research
  19. Declaration of Independence’s promises ring out today as loudly as they did for Lincoln, FDR and through 249 years of US history
  20. Everything everywhere all at once: How Zohran Mamdani campaigned both online and with a ground game
  21. The housing crisis is forcing Americans to choose between affordability and safety
  22. FDA claims on COVID-19 vaccine safety are unsupported by reliable data – and could severely hinder vaccine access
  23. The marketing genius of Spotify Wrapped
  24. Lasting peace in Ukraine may hinge on independent monitors – yet Trump’s 28-point plan barely mentions them
  25. A hard year for federal workers offers a real-time lesson in resilience
  26. Why one 16th-century theologian’s advice for a bitterly divided nation holds true today
  27. What are small modular reactors, a new type of nuclear power plant sought to feed AI’s energy demand?
  28. Google’s proposed data center in orbit will face issues with space debris in an already crowded orbit
  29. Yes, the government can track your location – but usually not by spying on you directly
  30. Federal funding cuts are only one problem facing America’s colleges and universities
  31. Labeling dissent as terrorism: New US domestic terrorism priorities raise constitutional alarms
  32. Empathy and reasoning aren’t rivals – new research shows they work together to drive people to help more
  33. Flat Earth, spirits and conspiracy theories – experience can shape even extraordinary beliefs
  34. Planning life after high school isn’t easy – 4 tips to help students and families navigate the process
  35. Why do family companies even exist? They know how to ‘win without fighting’
  36. Larry Summers’ sexism is jeopardizing his power and privilege, but the entire economics profession hinders progress for women
  37. Sugar starts corroding your teeth within seconds – here’s how to protect your pearly whites from decay
  38. Google plans to power a new data center with fossil fuels, yet release almost no emissions – here’s how its carbon capture tech works
  39. High-speed rail moves millions throughout the world every day – but in the US, high cost and low use make its future bumpy
  40. Ranked choice voting outperforms the winner-take-all system used to elect nearly every US politician
  41. Why protecting Colorado children from dying of domestic violence is such a hard problem
  42. We are hardwired to sing − and it’s good for us, too
  43. Winter storms blanket the East, while the U.S. West is wondering: Where’s the snow?
  44. Winter storms blanket the East, while the US West is wondering: Where’s the snow?
  45. Stalin’s postwar terror targeted Soviet Jews – in the name of ‘anti-cosmopolitanism’
  46. Rural high school students are more likely than city kids to get their diplomas, but they remain less likely to go to college
  47. Texas cities have some of the highest preterm birth rates in the US, highlighting maternal health crisis nationwide
  48. New York’s wealthy warn of a tax exodus after Mamdani’s win – but the data says otherwise
  49. Why do people get headaches and migraines? A child neurologist explains the science of head pain and how to treat it
  50. When the world’s largest battery power plant caught fire, toxic metals rained down – wetlands captured the fallout