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What Bolsonaro's presidency means for Brazil: 5 essential reads

  • Written by Catesby Holmes, Global Affairs Editor, The Conversation US
Supporters of Brazilian president-elect Jair Bolsonaro hope he will 'transform' their country, which has been mired in political and economic crises since 2015.AP Photo/Leo Correa

Jair Bolsonaro, the right-wing populist who cruised to victory in Brazil’s presidential election, is notoriously outspoken about his dim view of Afro-Brazilians,...

Read more: What Bolsonaro's presidency means for Brazil: 5 essential reads

Los migrantes de la 'caravana' tienen derecho de asilo en EEUU, pero conseguirlo les será difícil

  • Written by Abigail Stepnitz, PhD Candidate, University of California, Berkeley

Alrededor de 5.000 personas, la mayoría pertenecientes al violento e inestable “Triángulo del Norte” de Centroamérica –formado por Guatemala, El Salvador y Honduras–, están atravesando México con la intención de solicitar asilo en la frontera de Estados Unidos. La denominada “c...

Read more: Los migrantes de la 'caravana' tienen derecho de asilo en EEUU, pero conseguirlo les será difícil

Money in elections doesn't mean what you think it does

  • Written by Suzanne Robbins, Assistant Professor of political science, University of Florida
Money in politics? Somebody's got to pay for those signs.AP/John Raoux

Money is indispensable in American electoral campaigns. Without it, candidates cannot amplify their message to reach voters and it’s harder to motivate people to take interest and vote.

Nevertheless, a May 2018 Pew survey revealed a bipartisan 70 percent of respondents...

Read more: Money in elections doesn't mean what you think it does

Why students need more 'math talk'

  • Written by Matthew Campbell, Assistant Professor of Secondary Mathematics Education, West Virginia University
Facilitated discussions about math can help kids learn.PanyaStudio/shutterstock.com

Test scores, school report cards and Facebook posts complaining about homework problems often drive critiques of how math is taught in schools.

Amid the debates, it has become increasingly clear that one ingredient is necessary for success: opportunities for...

Read more: Why students need more 'math talk'

The Amish live simply, but don't confuse them with environmentalists

  • Written by David McConnell, Professor of Anthropology, The College of Wooster
An Amish girl chases a cow from the outfield during a baseball game in Bergholz, Ohio, April 9, 2013. AP Photo/Scott R. Galvin

In recent decades, many popular myths about the Amish – that they are dying out, or are a homogeneous community of technophobes, or are “stuck in the past” – have been convincingly dispelled. Yet the...

Read more: The Amish live simply, but don't confuse them with environmentalists

Beating breast cancer only to die of opioid use – a sad Appalachian story

  • Written by Rajesh Balkrishnan, Professor, Public Health Sciences, University of Virginia
Pain medication such as oxycodone often helps cancer patients deal with intense pain after treatment, but it also can lead to abuse.Steve Heal/Shutterstock.com

The availability of life-prolonging treatments such as hormonal therapies and other targeted chemotherapy has led to a sharp decline in breast cancer deaths in the United States.

But despite...

Read more: Beating breast cancer only to die of opioid use – a sad Appalachian story

4 reasons gerrymandering is getting worse

  • Written by John Rennie Short, Professor, School of Public Policy, University of Maryland, Baltimore County

November’s midterm elections are some of the most eagerly awaited, closely watched and hyperpartisan for many years.

But the results for many congressional House seats are already known because the election will occur at a time of rampant gerrymandering.

Maryland’s 3rd Congressional District.

For example, Maryland’s 3rd...

Read more: 4 reasons gerrymandering is getting worse

Can Seabiscuit's DNA explain his elite racing ability?

  • Written by Steven Tammariello, Associate Professor of Biological Sciences and Director of the Institute for Equine Genomics, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Eighty years ago, Seabiscuit trounced Triple Crown winner War Admiral. AP Photo

Seabiscuit was not an impressive-looking horse. He was considered quite lazy, preferring to eat and sleep in his stall rather than exercise. He’d been written off by most of the racing industry after losing his first 17 races. But Seabiscuit eventually became...

Read more: Can Seabiscuit's DNA explain his elite racing ability?

Bolsonaro wins Brazil election, promises to purge leftists from country

  • Written by Helder Ferreira do Vale, Associate Professor, Graduate School of International and Area Studies, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies
Bolsonaro supporters celebrate outside his home in Rio de Janeiro after exit polls on Oct. 28 declared him the preliminary winner of Brazil's 2018 presidential election.AP Photo/Leo Correa

After the most polarized and divisive campaign in its modern history, Brazil has elected as its next president a right-wing politician who openly disdains human...

Read more: Bolsonaro wins Brazil election, promises to purge leftists from country

Terror isn't always a weapon of the weak -- it can also support the powerful

  • Written by Arie Perliger, Director of Security Studies and Professor, University of Massachusetts Lowell
A memorial vigil for the victims of the shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue where a shooter killed 11 and wounding six on Oct. 27, 2018. AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

People often believe that terrorism is the weapon of the weak.

In other words, terrorism is practiced by marginalized groups that cannot influence government’s policies through...

Read more: Terror isn't always a weapon of the weak -- it can also support the powerful

More Articles ...

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  3. As digital threats grow, will cyber insurance take off?
  4. Roundup weed killer lawsuit hits a snag, but Monsanto is not off the hook
  5. How do colleges use affirmative action? Even some activists don't understand
  6. Florida's Amendment 4: Restoring voting rights to people with felonies might also reduce crime
  7. Why do some people hurt more than others?
  8. In the turmoil of 1968, music failed to seize the moment
  9. Why believing in ghosts can make you a better person
  10. Got the winning lottery ticket? An economist explains what to do with all that money
  11. Migrants travel in groups for a simple reason: safety
  12. First-generation college students earn less than graduates whose parents went to college
  13. Overhype and 'research laundering' are a self-inflicted wound for social science
  14. Get a flu shot now – for your benefit and your neighbors'
  15. Yes, eating meat affects the environment, but cows are not killing the climate
  16. Spread of self-driving cars could cause more pollution – unless the electric grid transforms radically
  17. Foundations are making climate change a bigger priority
  18. Tanzanian president bluntly attacks contraception, saying high birth rates are good for economy
  19. Collaboration, not fighting, is what the rural West is really about
  20. My thoughts are my password, because my brain reactions are unique
  21. Republican women are just fine, thank you, with being Republican
  22. Hambre mundial aumenta por tercer año consecutivo debido al cambio climático
  23. Democrats can't count on Latinos to swing the midterms
  24. How American tax laws encourage inequality
  25. Migrant caravan members have right to claim asylum – here's why getting it will be hard
  26. Reclaiming video games' queer past before it disappears
  27. Energy transitions are nothing new but the one underway is unprecedented and urgent
  28. What kind of support do breast cancer patients want? Food, rides and prayer
  29. Why cows are getting a bad rap in lab-grown meat debate
  30. Nonprofit drugmaker Civica Rx aims to cure a health care system ailment
  31. Georgia election fight shows that black voter suppression, a southern tradition, still flourishes
  32. Trump encuentra oportunidad electoral en la crisis humanitaria venezolana
  33. Why washing your hands well is so important to protect your family from the flu
  34. E-cigarettes and a new threat: How to dispose of them
  35. Transgender and non-binary people face health care discrimination every day in the US
  36. Georgia's gubernatorial race could be a bellwether for Democrats nationally
  37. These kids and young adults want their day in court on climate change
  38. Artificial intelligence will make you smarter
  39. The Village Voice's photographers captured change, turmoil unfolding on New York City's streets
  40. Why the Christian idea of hell no longer persuades people to care for the poor
  41. Why did the flu kill 80,000 Americans last year?
  42. Harvard case could represent the end of race in college admissions
  43. A day to celebrate chemistry’s favorite unit — the mole. But what’s a mole?
  44. Saudi Arabia is a repressive regime – and so are a lot of US allies
  45. ¿Eres ciudadano? El gobierno de Trump quiere saber
  46. Two Native American geneticists interpret Elizabeth Warren's DNA test
  47. Does climate change affect real estate prices? Only if you believe in it
  48. It's the economics: Red states embracing wind energy don't do it for the climate
  49. Many Midwesterners will likely never believe in climate change. Here’s how to encourage them to act anyway
  50. Is climate change causing a rise in the number of mosquito and tick-borne diseases?