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The animal world is still awesome: 3 essential reads

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Environment + Energy Editor, The Conversation
Some tropical frogs may be developing resistance to a fungus that has devastated species like _Atelopus varius_, the variable harlequin frog.Brian Gratwicke/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

Editor’s note: As we come to the end of the year, Conversation editors take a look back at the stories that – for them – exemplified 2018.

As the effects of...

Read more: The animal world is still awesome: 3 essential reads

Remember, you're being manipulated on social media: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Science + Technology Editor, The Conversation US
Beware the strings attached to social media <a href="https://www.jeffinglis.com">and</a> smartphone use.VAZZEN/Shutterstock.com

Editor’s note: As we come to the end of the year, Conversation editors take a look back at the stories that – for them – exemplified 2018.

Sometime in the political frenzy of the past year, I...

Read more: Remember, you're being manipulated on social media: 4 essential reads

What's wrong with Huawei, and why are countries banning the Chinese telecommunications firm?

  • Written by Frank J. Cilluffo, Director, McCrary Institute for Cyber and Critical Infrastructure Security, Auburn University
A major Chinese technology firm is under international scrutiny for its potential role in spying.AP Photo/Andy Wong

The Chinese telecommunications company Huawei is under scrutiny around the globe over concerns that its close ties with the Chinese government present national security threats to the U.S., Europe and allied countries. Huawei, which de...

Read more: What's wrong with Huawei, and why are countries banning the Chinese telecommunications firm?

CBS' Moonves scandal shows why corporate America needs tougher CEO pay contracts

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon
Protesters stand outside the CBS shareholder's meeting.AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Corporate America is notorious for letting disgraced CEOswalk away with millions.

Yet somehow Les Moonves, who was fired from CBS “for cause” on Dec. 17 after a monthslong investigation into his alleged misdeeds, lost US$120 million in promised severance benefits...

Read more: CBS' Moonves scandal shows why corporate America needs tougher CEO pay contracts

Only Les Moonves' egregious behavior saved CBS $120M – that's why CEO contracts need to change

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Associate Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon
Protesters stand outside the CBS shareholder's meeting.AP Photo/Seth Wenig

Corporate America is notorious for letting disgraced CEOswalk away with millions.

Yet somehow Les Moonves, who was fired from CBS “for cause” on Dec. 17 after a monthslong investigation into his alleged misdeeds, lost US$120 million in promised severance benefits...

Read more: Only Les Moonves' egregious behavior saved CBS $120M – that's why CEO contracts need to change

What is 'green' dry cleaning? A toxics expert explains

  • Written by Joy Onasch, Business & Industry Program Manager, Toxics Use Reduction Institute, University of Massachusetts Lowell
Do you know what have your clothes been soaking in?ET1972/Shutterstock

The winter holidays are a busy time for many businesses, including retail stores, grocers, liquor stores – and dry cleaners. People pull out special-occasion clothes made of silk, satin or other fabrics that don’t launder well in soap and water. Then there are all...

Read more: What is 'green' dry cleaning? A toxics expert explains

An Indian perspective on the Poland climate meeting: Not much help for the world's poor and vulnerable

  • Written by Arun Agrawal, Professor of Natural Resources & Environment, University of Michigan
Bamboo structures on the Brahmaputra river in Majuli, northeastern India, intended to help prevent land erosion in a region experiencing erratic weather patterns and bursts of intense rainfall. AP Photo/Anupam Nath

The international climate change conference that concluded in Katowice, Poland on Dec. 15 had limited ambitions and expectations...

Read more: An Indian perspective on the Poland climate meeting: Not much help for the world's poor and...

Are your grandparents getting tipsy at the holiday party?

  • Written by Amy Burdette, Associate Professor of Sociology, Florida State University
Most people are fine with a drink, but when one becomes several, there may be a problem.Zachary Byer/Shutterstock.com

November and December are defined by parties and social events. And in the U.S., alcohol is synonymous with socializing, with Americans particularly likely to overindulge during the holidays.

Older people as a group have not...

Read more: Are your grandparents getting tipsy at the holiday party?

The humble origins of 'Silent Night'

  • Written by Sarah Eyerly, Assistant Professor of Musicology and Director of the Early Music Program, Florida State University
This undated score, written by Joseph Mohr and titled 'Weynachts Lied' ('Christmas Carol'), is the earliest known surviving copy of 'Silent Night.' Salzburg Museum

One of the world’s most famous Christmas carols, “Silent Night,” celebrates its 200th anniversary this year.

Over the centuries, hundreds of Christmas carols have been...

Read more: The humble origins of 'Silent Night'

Alternative approaches needed to end racial disparities in school discipline

  • Written by Jonathan F. Zaff, Research Associate Professor and Executive Director, Center for Promise, Boston University
A student discusses a recent conflict with another student solved through restorative justice, at Ed White Middle School in San Antonio, Texas.Eric Gay/AP

Education Secretary Betsy DeVos wants to get rid of an Obama-era policy that sought to end racial disparities in school suspensions and expulsions. Statistics show those disparities mean black...

Read more: Alternative approaches needed to end racial disparities in school discipline

More Articles ...

  1. Informal networks of generosity are supporting asylum seekers on both sides of the border
  2. 'Tis the season for conception
  3. Does terrorism work? We studied 90 groups to get the answer
  4. Is it unethical to give your cat catnip?
  5. Who is responsible for migrants?
  6. In 'Mary Poppins Returns,' an ode to the gas lamp
  7. How to handle the return of a long-lost family member during the holidays
  8. An economist's take on the Poland climate conference: The glass is more than half full
  9. Cargo ships are emitting boatloads of carbon, and nobody wants to take the blame
  10. If you recycled all the plastic garbage in the world, you could buy the NFL, Apple and Microsoft
  11. You can probably eat more Christmas cookies than you think - just take a look at the calorie guidelines
  12. Advanced digital networks look a lot like the human nervous system
  13. How T.M. Landry College Prep failed black families
  14. Shockwaves from French 'yellow vest' protests felt across Europe
  15. Exorcisms have been part of Christianity for centuries
  16. Indian bill to 'protect' trafficking victims will make sex workers less safe
  17. The math on why the Trump administration's fuel standards report is seriously flawed
  18. Why you should give your grandparents a 3D printer for Christmas
  19. China's win-at-all-costs approach suggests it will follow its own dangerous path in biomedicine
  20. Why the Texas ruling on Obamacare is on shaky legal ground
  21. Can your heart grow three sizes? A doctor reads 'How the Grinch Stole Christmas'
  22. Is the FDA being Grinch-like in raising concerns about raw cookie dough?
  23. Cómo alentar a las niñas a estudiar carreras científicas y matemáticas: 7 estrategias
  24. As hunting declines, efforts grow to broaden the funding base for wildlife conservation
  25. What the US could learn from Thailand about health care coverage
  26. Trump administration ban on NIH use of fetal tissue should worry all scientists
  27. The NRA's financial weakness, explained
  28. Nearly all sexual harassment at work goes unreported – and those who do report often see zero benefit
  29. We train Colombian woolly monkeys to be wild again – and maybe save them from extinction
  30. How wireless recharging works – and doesn't, yet
  31. Worry over kids' excessive smartphone use is more justified than ever before
  32. Who are Yemen's Houthis?
  33. Looking for a high-tech gift for a young child? Think playgrounds, not playpens
  34. The key to our humanity isn't genetic, it's microbial
  35. Why shaming your children on social media may make things worse
  36. What winter solstice rituals tell us about indigenous people
  37. No coups occurred in 2018. Will next year be so stable?
  38. In 2019, women's rights are still not explicitly recognized in US Constitution
  39. Time travel is possible – but only if you have an object with infinite mass
  40. How big data has created a big crisis in science
  41. China's climate progress may have faltered in 2018, but it seems to be on the right path
  42. With a limited on-screen presence, autistic characters have emerged in another medium: fan fiction
  43. Brexit rooted more in elite politics than mass resentment
  44. Think teens need the sex talk? Older adults may need it even more
  45. You may not even need a telescope to see Comet 46P/Wirtanen in the night sky this month
  46. El glaciar peruano Quelccaya está en peligro, así como las personas que viven de él
  47. How stereo was first sold to a skeptical public
  48. Diamonds are forever – whether made in a lab or mined from the earth
  49. Don't worry about screen time – focus on how you use technology
  50. Where's my package? Common carrier freight lockers can ease city traffic and prevent failed deliveries