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Zika and abortion: will the virus prompt Latin America to rethink abortion and birth control?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The Zika virus outbreak and its probable association with microcephaly in newborns are prompting calls to loosen Latin America’s strict abortion laws and make birth control more readily available.

Abortion is fully criminalized in six countries in the region. In El Salvador, for instance, women who have abortions can face prison. In many...

Read more: Zika and abortion: will the virus prompt Latin America to rethink abortion and birth control?

In a state wrought with racial tension, Jackie Robinson suited up for his first spring training game

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Seventy years ago, on the morning of March 17, 1946, Jackie Robinson sat with his wife Rachel in a small bedroom in a stranger’s home in Daytona Beach, Florida, and wondered what lay ahead for him that afternoon.

Robinson would make history if he played for the Triple A Montreal Royals in his first spring training game. No black had worn the...

Read more: In a state wrought with racial tension, Jackie Robinson suited up for his first spring training game

Recalculating! By not driving the optimal route, you're causing traffic jams

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

If you use a car to get around, every time you get behind the wheel you’re confronted with a choice: how will you navigate to your destination? Whether it’s a trip you take every day, such as from home to work, or to someplace you haven’t been before, you need to decide on a route.

Transportation research has traditionally assumed...

Read more: Recalculating! By not driving the optimal route, you're causing traffic jams

'Acceptable risk' is a better way to think about radiation exposure in Fukushima

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

On March 11, 2011, the Fukushima Prefecture of Japan experienced multiple nuclear reactor meltdowns as a consequence of an earthquake and a subsequent tsunami. The meltdowns resulted in the release of radioactivity into the environment and 150,000 people were evacuated from their homes specifically due to radiation concerns.

Now, five years later,...

Read more: 'Acceptable risk' is a better way to think about radiation exposure in Fukushima

The last time an outsider like Trump crashed the GOP? 1940

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe surprise Republican candidate in 1940: Wendell Willkie. Library of Congress

Donald Trump’s challenge to the GOP establishment now seems on course to succeed.

As Republicans (and many others) consider what turning the party’s presidential nomination over to a real outsider will likely mean, it’s worth looking back at the last...

Read more: The last time an outsider like Trump crashed the GOP? 1940

From emerging to submerging: the debt burden killing off the age of the BRICS

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCracks are showing up in the growth success stories of emerging markets like Brazil.AK Rockefeller/Flickr, CC BY-SA

Over the past three decades, global interest in emerging markets has soared, and when the financial crisis of 2008 hit, emerging markets were largely thought to be the next engine of global growth.

Insofar as they have complied with...

Read more: From emerging to submerging: the debt burden killing off the age of the BRICS

March Madness means money – it's time to talk about who's getting paid

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The NCAA men’s basketball tournament starts Tuesday. From then until the final on April 4, CBS Sports and Turner Broadcasting will bring you every game, focusing on the buzzer beaters, the Cinderella stories, the athletes overcoming the odds.

It’ll all end, as it always does, with confetti guns and net-cutting, and a video montage of...

Read more: March Madness means money – it's time to talk about who's getting paid

More Articles ...

  1. We've been measuring inequality wrong – here's the real story
  2. Here's another reason why many community college students do not get their degree
  3. Pi pops up where you don't expect it
  4. Letting kids stand more in the classroom could help them learn
  5. Is your March Madness bracket really better than mine?
  6. Why we have the most polarized Supreme Court in history
  7. Inspired by Kim Kardashian, a feverish legion of followers struggle to achieve online fame
  8. Public universities must do more: the public needs our help and expertise
  9. The search for the value of pi
  10. What do special educators need to succeed?
  11. BPS, a popular substitute for BPA in consumer products, may not be safer
  12. Never mind SpaceX's Falcon 9, where's my Millennium Falcon?
  13. Can we 'vaccinate' plants to boost their immunity?
  14. What AI can tell us about the U.S. Supreme Court
  15. Supreme Court losing luster in public’s eyes
  16. When good intentions aren't supported by social science evidence: diversity research and policy
  17. Are looser gun laws changing the social fabric of Missouri?
  18. Do polygamous marriages among liberal arts disciplines produce better scientists?
  19. Beyond silicon: the search for new semiconductors
  20. Why March 15 will be make-or-break for the presidential candidates
  21. Trump's campaign rhetoric, ISIS and the law of war
  22. Adding folic acid to staple foods can prevent birth defects, but most countries don't do it
  23. Shipwreck records and tree rings unveil Caribbean hurricane history – and clues to the future
  24. U.S. is a land of plenty, so why do millions of Americans still go hungry?
  25. Microwave repairs might annihilate zombie potholes once and for all
  26. How Donald Trump gets away with saying things other candidates can't
  27. Why is it so difficult to rein in Wall Street?
  28. Crash in oil prices will hurt the U.S. economy from Texas to Wall Street
  29. How can universities encourage young people to vote?
  30. Where do the 2016 candidates stand on contraception?
  31. Can you sue if someone posts an unflattering photo of you on social media?
  32. What makes one economy more resilient than another?
  33. Why the German language has so many great words
  34. Why are political experts mostly men? Women also know stuff
  35. Can drinking water be delivered without disinfectants like chlorine and still be safe?
  36. Hard data: is Trump or Cruz more electable?
  37. 'The Math Myth' fuels the algebra wars, but what's the fight really about?
  38. How Donald Trump broke the media
  39. How we used a century of data to create a modern, digital geologic map of Alaska
  40. Those post-binge-watching blues? They might be real
  41. Why the curvy new Barbie is good news for your little girl
  42. Organizing a student protest? Have a look at 1970s Germany
  43. It's time to measure 21st century aging with 21st century tools
  44. Supreme Court sides with EPA on cleaning Chesapeake Bay – and perhaps other waterways
  45. Presidential candidates offer sharp differences on the future of renewable energy
  46. How much can the next president influence the U.S. energy system?
  47. Should wealthier students get subsidized college education?
  48. How difficult would it be to repeal Obamacare for good?
  49. Does it matter who wins the election when it comes to the Middle East?
  50. Will the next U.S. president close the digital divide for Americans without broadband access?