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Republicans call for impeachment inquiry into Biden -- a process the founders intended to deter abuse of power as well as remove from office

  • Written by Clark D. Cunningham, Professor of law and ethics, Georgia State University

Yielding to pressure from hard-line members of the GOP House caucus, on Sept. 12, 2023, U.S. House Speaker Kevin McCarthy directed the top Republicans in Congress to open a formal impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden. The Republicans allege that the president committed financial wrongdoing with foreign businesses.

GOP-led congressional inqui...

Read more: Republicans call for impeachment inquiry into Biden -- a process the founders intended to deter...

US response to Gabon and Niger coups suggests need for a new West Africa policy in Washington

  • Written by Julius A. Amin, Professor of History, University of Dayton
imageSupporters of Niger's pro-coup National Council for Safeguard of the Homeland celebrateAFP via Getty Images

Recent coups in the West African nations of Gabon and Niger caught U.S. diplomats a little off guard. They also indicate Washington may need to reassess its policy in the region or risk becoming increasingly irrelevant to the new governments.

D...

Read more: US response to Gabon and Niger coups suggests need for a new West Africa policy in Washington

Antisemitism on Elon Musk's X is surging and dredging up many ancient, defamatory themes of blaming Jews

  • Written by Pamela S. Nadell, Professor and Patrick Clendenen Chair in Women's & Gender History and Director of the Jewish Studies Program, American University
imageElon Musk has both sparked and permitted antisemitism on X, the social media platform he now owns.Chesnot/Getty Images

Since buying Twitter, rebranded as X, billionaire Elon Musk, who calls himself a “free speech absolutist,” has welcomed hatemongers to the platform, including one who recently coined the trending hashtag #BanTheADL.

The...

Read more: Antisemitism on Elon Musk's X is surging and dredging up many ancient, defamatory themes of...

Looking for your 'calling'? What people get wrong when chasing meaningful work

  • Written by Garrett Potts, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, University of South Florida
imageSearching for your 'calling' can be a source of joy -- but also stress and distraction.Tom Werner/Stone via Getty Images

As a professor, I’m fortunate to teach a course called World Religions for Healthcare Professionals that prepares students for the spiritual and ethical issues they may encounter in their careers. But the class often boils...

Read more: Looking for your 'calling'? What people get wrong when chasing meaningful work

How evasive and transmissible is the newest omicron offshoot, BA.2.86, that causes COVID-19? 4 questions answered

  • Written by Suresh V. Kuchipudi, Professor and Department Chair of Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, University of Pittsburgh
imageBA.2.86 is beginning to spread throughout the United States.baranozdemir/E+ via Getty Images

The latest variant, or sublineage, of SARS-CoV-2 to emerge on the scene, BA.2.86, has public health experts on alert as COVID-19 hospitalizations begin to rise and the new variant makes its way across the globe.

The Conversation asked Suresh V. Kuchipudi, a...

Read more: How evasive and transmissible is the newest omicron offshoot, BA.2.86, that causes COVID-19? 4...

30 years after Arafat-Rabin handshake, clear flaws in Oslo Accords doomed peace talks to failure

  • Written by Maha Nassar, Associate Professor in the School of Middle Eastern and North African Studies, University of Arizona
imageA historic handshake.MPI/Getty Images

On Sept. 13, 1993, the world watched as Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin and Palestine Liberation Organization Chairman Yasser Arafat shook hands on the White House lawn. It was a stunning moment. The famous handshake between adversaries marked the beginning of what became known as the Oslo Accords, a...

Read more: 30 years after Arafat-Rabin handshake, clear flaws in Oslo Accords doomed peace talks to failure

Quantum information science is rarely taught in high school – here's why that matters

  • Written by Karen J. Matsler, Assistant Professor in Practice for UTeach Arlington Program, University of Texas at Arlington
imageMany students attend high schools that don't offer physics. BraunS/E+ via Getty Images

The first time I heard about quantum information science, I was at a teacher development workshop in Canada in 2008.

I already knew that quantum science was the study of the smallest objects in nature. I also knew that information science was the study of...

Read more: Quantum information science is rarely taught in high school – here's why that matters

Can animals give birth to twins?

  • Written by Michael Jaffe, Associate Professor of Small Animal Surgery, Mississippi State University
imageSome animals, including goats, regularly give birth to two babies at once.Image Source 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.


Can animals give birth to twins? – Mia C., age 10


Ask any parent – welcoming a...

Read more: Can animals give birth to twins?

How does fever help fight infections? There's more to it than even some scientists realize

  • Written by Edmund K. LeGrand, Adjunct Professor of Biomedical and Diagnostic Sciences, University of Tennessee
imageBeing feverish is unpleasant, but it can help your body overcome invading pathogens.Narisara Nami/Moment via Getty Images

When you’re sick with a fever, your doctor will likely tell you it’s a sign that your immune system is defending you against an infection. Fever typically results from immune cells at infected sites sending chemical...

Read more: How does fever help fight infections? There's more to it than even some scientists realize

Ancient texts depict all kinds of people, not just straight and cis ones – this college course looks at LGBTQ sexuality and gender in Egypt, Greece and Rome

  • Written by Tina Chronopoulos, Associate Professor of Middle Eastern and Ancient Mediterranean Studies, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageA painting from the ancient Egyptian tomb of Niankhkhum and Khnumhotep, royal servants whom some scholars have interpreted to be lovers.kairoinfo4u/Flickr, CC BY-NC-SAimage

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.

Title of course:

“LGBTQ Antiquity: A View from the...

Read more: Ancient texts depict all kinds of people, not just straight and cis ones – this college course...

More Articles ...

  1. Marrakech artisans – who have helped rebuild the Moroccan city before – are among those hit hard in the earthquake's devastation
  2. Philadelphia police rarely release body camera videos − here's why it happened in the fatal shooting of Eddie Irizarry
  3. Ukraine's push for NATO membership is rooted in its European past – and its future
  4. Anemia afflicts nearly 1 in 4 people worldwide, but there are practical strategies for reducing it
  5. The beautiful pessimism at the heart of Jimmy Buffett's music
  6. Why managers’ attempts to empower their employees often fail – and even lead to unethical behavior
  7. Separating molecules is a highly energy-intensive but essential part of drug development, desalination and other industrial processes – improving membranes can help
  8. IRS is using $60B funding boost to ramp up use of technology to collect taxes − not just hiring more enforcement agents
  9. The untold story of how Howard University came to be known as 'The Mecca'
  10. Entrepreneurs, beware: Owning your own business can make it harder to get hired later
  11. Alabama’s defiant new voting map rejected by federal court -- after Republicans ignored the Supreme Court’s directive to add a second majority-Black House district
  12. Krishna Janmashtami: Celebrating the birthday of a beloved Hindu god, renowned for his compassion and his wisdom in the Bhagavad Gita
  13. Saudi reforms are softening Islam's role, but critics warn the kingdom will still take a hard line against dissent
  14. I love swords, so I designed a course on how to use them to succeed in life
  15. Paper ballots are good, but accurately hand-counting them all is next to impossible
  16. The US broke global trade rules to try to fix climate change – to finish the job, it has to fix the trade system
  17. How video games like 'Starfield' are creating a new generation of classical music fans
  18. California and Florida grew quickly on the promise of perfect climates in the 1900s – today, they lead the country in climate change risks
  19. Climate change is destroying reefs, but the effects are more than ecological – coral's been woven into culture and spirituality for centuries
  20. How do flies find every stinky garbage dumpster? A biologist explains their sensory superpower
  21. Should AI be permitted in college classrooms? 4 scholars weigh in
  22. Jobs are up, wages less so – and lower purchasing power could still lead the US into a recession
  23. As concern about Mitch McConnell's health grows, his legacy remains strong
  24. ‘The Blind Side’ lawsuit spotlights tricky areas of family law
  25. North America’s summer of wildfire smoke: 2023 was only the beginning
  26. Trump's mug shot is now a means of entertainment and fundraising − but it will go down in history as an important cultural artifact
  27. Overly flexible connective tissue causes problems in joints and throughout the body − and is often missed by doctors
  28. White men have controlled women’s reproductive rights throughout American history – the post-Dobbs era is no different
  29. United Auto Workers strike – if it happens – should channel the legacy of Walter Reuther, who led the union at the peak of its power
  30. Michael Oher, Mike Tyson and the question of whether you own your life story
  31. Space junk in Earth orbit and on the Moon will increase with future missions − but nobody's in charge of cleaning it up
  32. Trans students benefit from gender-inclusive classrooms, research shows – and so do the other students and science itself
  33. How to get federal disaster aid: FEMA is running out of money, but these strategies can help survivors of Hurricane Idalia and the Maui fires get aid faster
  34. Peruvian writers tell of a future rooted in the past and contemporary societal issues
  35. Special counsels, like the one leading the Justice Department's investigation of Hunter Biden, are intended to be independent − but they aren't entirely
  36. RICO is often used to target the mob and cartels − but Trump and his associates aren't the first outside those worlds to face charges
  37. 50 years after the Bunker Hill mine fire caused one of the largest lead-poisoning cases in US history, Idaho's Silver Valley is still at risk
  38. Workers like it when their employers talk about diversity and inclusion
  39. Iran's street art shows defiance, resistance and resilience
  40. Giraffes range across diverse African habitats − we’re using GPS, satellites and statistics to track and protect them
  41. With 'Goodbye Mary,' Molly Tuttle extends country music's lineage of reproductive rights songs to the post-Roe era
  42. What can cities do to correct racism and help all communities live longer? It starts with city planning
  43. How individual, ordinary Jews fought Nazi persecution − a new view of history
  44. Quran burning in Sweden prompts debate on the fine line between freedom of expression and incitement of hatred
  45. Machines can't always take the heat − two engineers explain the physics behind how heat waves threaten everything from cars to computers
  46. Prescriptions for fruits and vegetables can improve the health of people with diabetes and other ailments, new study finds
  47. This course examines the dark realities behind your favorite children's stories
  48. This course examines the dark realities behind your favorite children's stories
  49. Hurricane Idalia intensifies over extremely warm Gulf waters, on track for Florida landfall as a dangerous major hurricane
  50. Hurricane Idalia intensifies over extremely warm Gulf waters, on track for Florida landfall as a dangerous major hurricane