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Has Haiti's cholera epidemic become a permanent problem?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

On January 12, 2010 a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti, killing thousands of people and displacing millions more.

Ten months later the country was stricken with an outbreak of cholera, a deadly diarrheal disease. Though the number of cholera cases has decreased from a peak of approximately 25,000 cases per month, it is likely that thousands of...

Read more: Has Haiti's cholera epidemic become a permanent problem?

For female architects, the loss of Zaha Hadid is personal

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

As a luminary in the world of architecture, Zaha Hadid, who died on March 31, was a celebrity whose name, face and buildings are known by millions.

But the grief felt by women architects is on a different, intimate scale. With Hadid’s passing, we have lost a role model in a field that has few others.

That is not to say that there are not a...

Read more: For female architects, the loss of Zaha Hadid is personal

Will the health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: maybe

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Climate change is a major public health threat, already making existing problems like asthma, exposure to extreme heat, food poisoning, and infectious disease more severe, and posing new risks from climate change-related disasters, including death or injury.

Those were the alarming conclusions of a new scientific assessment report released by the...

Read more: Will the health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: maybe

Will we soon see another wave of bird extinctions in the Americas?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

In the shady recesses of unassuming forest patches in eastern Brazil, bird species are taking their final bows on the global evolutionary stage, and winking out.

These are obscure birds with quaint names: Alagoas Foliage-Gleaner, Pernambuco Pygmy-Owl, Cryptic Treehunter. But their disappearance portends a turning point in a global biodiversity...

Read more: Will we soon see another wave of bird extinctions in the Americas?

Women's soccer shows how far we've come since Title IX – and what battles remain

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Five members of the women’s national soccer team recently filed a complaint alleging the sport’s governing body in the U.S. violated the Equal Pay Act and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act by paying them less than the men.

In their complaint with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), the women detail how their pay and...

Read more: Women's soccer shows how far we've come since Title IX – and what battles remain

Offshore drilling: why it makes economic sense to wait

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageActivists surround Shell Oil rig in Seattle's Elliot Bay to protest Arctic drilling plansDaniella Beccaria/Flickr, CC BY-SA

From chants of “Drill, Baby, Drill” to outrage over the BP oil spill, offshore drilling has been highly controversial in recent years. Some view it as a vastly underused revenue source, while others see it as a...

Read more: Offshore drilling: why it makes economic sense to wait

The novel and play that predicted Donald Trump's rise – and countered a swell of Great Depression demagoguery

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePosters advertise the dramatization of Sinclair Lewis' 'It Can't Happen Here.'Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

The performing arts and politics have an uneasy relationship.

From Aristophanes satirizing the senselessness of the Peloponnesian War in Lysistrata to Shakespeare telling the story of Elizabeth I’s grandparents in Henry IV Parts I and II,...

Read more: The novel and play that predicted Donald Trump's rise – and countered a swell of Great Depression...

More Articles ...

  1. Reconsidering Body Worlds: why do we still flock to exhibits of dead human beings?
  2. Taxpayers beware: tax software may end up costing more than you think
  3. The most American pop culture phenomenon of them all
  4. Will a new government report on health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: perhaps
  5. Tiny flea reveals the devastating costs of invasive species
  6. Four questions Belgians should ask about the Patriot Act
  7. Customer service on hold: we hate phone menus and don’t trust virtual assistants like Siri
  8. Are drones really dangerous to airplanes?
  9. We need a national conversation about sensible drone laws
  10. Are robots taking our jobs?
  11. What schools don't tell you about campus sexual assault
  12. Do prehistoric Pueblo populist revolutions presage American politics today?
  13. Will the Tesla Model 3 recharge the U.S. electric vehicle market?
  14. Why make-believe play is an important part of childhood development
  15. Winning Wisconsin won't fix Bernie Sanders' superdelegate problem
  16. From Panama papers to Brazilian bribes: why corruption is so costly
  17. When covering elections, journalists face a debilitating dilemma
  18. How drones can improve scientific research in the field
  19. Why X-ray astronomers are anxious for good news from troubled Hitomi satellite
  20. Fewer poor students are being enrolled in state universities. Here's why
  21. 'What has happened to the American Dream?'
  22. From Panama papers to Brazilian bribes: why corruption is so bad
  23. Are Trump and Sanders rewriting the rules on money in politics?
  24. What's the backlash against gender-neutral bathrooms all about?
  25. Can I trust my robot? And should my robot trust me?
  26. Aging voting machines threaten election integrity
  27. CRISPR dispute raises bigger patent issues that we're not talking about
  28. Doctors don't talk to their patients about sexual health. Here's why they should
  29. Is the American Dream dead?
  30. Explainer: What do child prodigies have in common with kids with autism?
  31. Who needs to be in an ICU? It's hard for doctors to tell
  32. Syrian refugees next door?
  33. Why so many Americans think they're #blessed
  34. How can we help young adults with autism thrive in the workplace?
  35. Why is the U.S. unwilling to pay for good public transportation?
  36. When will rooftop solar be cheaper than the grid? Here's a map
  37. Why so many baseball experts whiffed with last year's predictions
  38. We need to look beyond unemployment to fix labor market inequality
  39. ISIS has changed international law
  40. The waning influence of American political parties
  41. Eco-authenticity: advocating for a low-carbon world while living a high-carbon lifestyle
  42. Why the new SAT is a reminder to improve the teaching of writing
  43. Know your bugs – a closer look at viruses, bacteria, and parasites
  44. How Anonymous hacked Donald Trump
  45. Tuberculosis kills thousands of people every day – we aren't doing enough to stop it
  46. A new strategy for drought-stressed cities: graywater recycling
  47. How the Supreme Court made economic inequality a whole lot worse
  48. What if the FBI tried to crack an Android phone? We attacked one to find out
  49. What can fish mouths teach us about engineering clog-free filters?
  50. Can a Russian-funded cable network actually promote free press in the U.S.?