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The Conversation

When Americans recall their roots, they open up to immigration

  • Written by Claire L. Adida, Associate Professor, Political Science, University of California San Diego
imageMigrants pray at a March 2 demonstration at San Ysidro crossing port in Tijuana, Mexico, to demand clearer U.S. migration policies.Guillermo Arias/AFP via Getty Images

Which was the first generation in your family to arrive in America? Do you know why your family came to the United States?

Members of President Joe Biden’s administration...

Read more: When Americans recall their roots, they open up to immigration

How do mRNA vaccines work – and why do you need a second dose? 5 essential reads

  • Written by Daniel Merino, Assistant Editor: Science, Health, Environment; Co-Host: The Conversation Weekly Podcast
imageNew mRNA vaccines use genes from the coronavirus to produce immunity. Andriy Onufriyenko/Moment via Getty Images

Tens of millions of people across the U.S. have received a coronavirus vaccine. So far, the majority of doses have been either the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, both of which use mRNA to generate an immune response. These gene-based...

Read more: How do mRNA vaccines work – and why do you need a second dose? 5 essential reads

The African roots of Swiss design

  • Written by Audrey G. Bennett, Program Director and Professor, Stamps School of Art & Design, University of Michigan
imageThe golden ratio, which has been a key tenet of modernist design, may have origins in Africa.tatadonets via Getty Images

Design remains a largely white profession, with Black people still vastly underrepresented – making up just 3% of the design industry, according to a 2019 survey.

This dilemma isn’t new. For decades, the field’s...

Read more: The African roots of Swiss design

Ancient leaves preserved under a mile of Greenland's ice – and lost in a freezer for years – hold lessons about climate change

  • Written by Andrew Christ, Postdoctoral Fellow and Lecturer in Geology, University of Vermont
imageRemnants of ancient Greenland tundra were preserved in soil beneath the ice sheet.Andrew Christ and Dorothy Peteet, CC BY-ND

In 1963, inside a covert U.S. military base in northern Greenland, a team of scientists began drilling down through the Greenland ice sheet. Piece by piece, they extracted an ice core 4 inches across and nearly a mile long....

Read more: Ancient leaves preserved under a mile of Greenland's ice – and lost in a freezer for years – hold...

US could save tens of thousands of lives and tens of billions of dollars with 3 weeks of strict COVID-19 measures

  • Written by Anna Scherbina, Associate Professor of Finance, Brandeis University
imageTexas recently eased all coronavirus restrictions, including mask-wearing. AP Photo/LM Otero

President Joe Biden commemorated the COVID-19 pandemic’s one-year anniversary by giving Americans an ambitious goal: Return to a semblance of normalcy by the Fourth of July.

“But to get there we can’t let our guard down,” he added.

Un...

Read more: US could save tens of thousands of lives and tens of billions of dollars with 3 weeks of strict...

After the insurrection, America's far-right groups get more extreme

  • Written by Matthew Valasik, Associate Professor of Sociology, Louisiana State University
imageThe U.S. Capitol remains on lockdown, defended by the National Guard.Olivier Douliery/AFP via Getty Images

As the U.S. grapples with domestic extremism in the wake of the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, warnings about more violence are coming from the FBI Director Chris Wray and others. The Conversation asked Matthew Valasik, a sociologist...

Read more: After the insurrection, America's far-right groups get more extreme

Is ballot collection, or 'ballot harvesting,' good for democracy? We asked 5 experts

  • Written by Nancy Martorano Miller, Associate Professor of Political Science, University of Dayton
imageRivko Knox, a volunteer with the League of Women Voters in Phoenix, and other voters sued Arizona over a law that bans the third-party collection of early mail-in ballots. The issue is now before the Supreme Court.AP Photo/Anita Snow

A 2016 Arizona state law makes the collection of ballots by third parties a felony.

The Democratic National...

Read more: Is ballot collection, or 'ballot harvesting,' good for democracy? We asked 5 experts

Resistance to military regime in Myanmar mounts as nurses, bankers join protests – despite bloody crackdown

  • Written by Tharaphi Than, Associate Professor, Department of World Cultures and Languages, Northern Illinois University
imageNurses in Myanmar have been striking since February to protest the military coup. STR/AFP via Getty Images

Young people were the first in Myanmar to peacefully protest the country’s new military regime. Then came labor unions. In the weeks since a Feb. 1 military coup, Mynamar’s resistance movement has expanded dramatically to include...

Read more: Resistance to military regime in Myanmar mounts as nurses, bankers join protests – despite bloody...

Federal support has shored up nonprofits during the coronavirus pandemic, but many groups are still struggling

  • Written by Dyana Mason, Associate Professor of Planning, Public Policy and Management, University of Oregon
imageA woman visits New York City's Whitney Museum of American Art in September.Spencer Platt/Getty Images

More than 60% of nonprofit social services, arts and culture organizations obtained Paycheck Protection Program loans during the first nine months of the COVID-19 pandemic. These very low-interest loans for small businesses and nonprofits turn into...

Read more: Federal support has shored up nonprofits during the coronavirus pandemic, but many groups are...

Why would anyone buy crypto art – let alone spend millions on what's essentially a link to a JPEG file?

  • Written by Aaron Hertzmann, Affiliate Faculty of Computer Science, University of Washington
imageSince so much our social lives are lived online, maybe it makes sense for our art collections to reside online, too.Ihor Melnyk via Getty Images

As an academic researcher, developer of artistic technology and amateur artist, I was quite skeptical about crypto art when I first read about it several years ago.

However, I follow a community of artists...

Read more: Why would anyone buy crypto art – let alone spend millions on what's essentially a link to a JPEG...

More Articles ...

  1. El Salvador's abortion ban jails women for miscarriages and stillbirths – now one woman's family seeks international justice
  2. Black students have far less trust in their colleges than other students do
  3. Fixing indoor air pollution problems that are raising Native Americans' COVID-19 risk
  4. How do astronauts go to the bathroom in space?
  5. 6 tips to help you detect fake science news
  6. What Alexander Hamilton's deep connections to slavery reveal about the need for reparations today
  7. Hip-hop professor looks to open doors with world's first peer-reviewed rap album
  8. ¿Por qué son tan populares las llamas y cuál es la razón por la que nos gustan mucho?
  9. Billions of cicadas may be coming soon to trees near you
  10. How the Nazis used music to celebrate and facilitate murder
  11. A concept from physics called negentropy could help your life run smoother
  12. At colleges nationwide, esports teams dominated by men
  13. Vaccine passports may be on the way – but are they a reason for hope or a cause for concern?
  14. Dementia patients are at greater risk for COVID-19, particularly African Americans and people with vascular dementia
  15. Holding on to hope is hard, even with the pandemic's end in sight – wisdom from poets through the ages
  16. Bangladesh at 50: A nation created in violence and still bearing scars of a troubled birth
  17. The gender gap in economics is huge – it's even worse than tech
  18. Debunking the myth of legislative gridlock as laws and policy are made in the nation's capital
  19. New Jersey State Police's first 100 years characterized by racial prejudice
  20. Women grow as much as 80% of India's food – but its new farm laws overlook their struggles
  21. Texas distorts its past – and Sam Houston's legacy – to defend Confederate monuments
  22. Sewage-testing robots process wastewater faster to predict COVID-19 outbreaks sooner
  23. How the quest for significance and respect underlies the white supremacist movement, conspiracy theories and a range of other problems
  24. Deaf women fought for the right to vote
  25. Millions of American parents will soon get a monthly allowance: 4 questions answered
  26. Skipping the vaccine line is not only unethical – it may undermine trust in the rollout
  27. The US delivers $1.9 trillion jolt of economic relief: 4 essential reads
  28. How a silent movie informs the current debate over the right to be forgotten
  29. It's not just a social media problem – how search engines spread misinformation
  30. Kids spending too much time staring at screens? Focus on positive goals to get them moving and reading and talking
  31. US army chaplain Emil Kapaun advancing toward sainthood
  32. I went down the 'rabbit hole' to debunk misinformation – here's what I learned about Big Ben and online information overload
  33. Netflix series 'Last Chance U' speaks to the reality of athletes I study
  34. China's 'mask diplomacy' wins influence across Africa, during and after the pandemic
  35. Biden ends policy forcing asylum-seekers to 'remain in Mexico' – but for 41,247 migrants, it's too late
  36. How 18 million Americans could move into rural areas – without leaving home
  37. Pollen can raise your risk of COVID-19 – and the season is getting longer thanks to climate change
  38. How a 'feminist' foreign policy would change the world
  39. How urban planning and housing policy helped create 'food apartheid' in US cities
  40. Traffic is down on American highways during the pandemic, but vehicle deaths are up – here’s how to stay safe on the road
  41. COVID-19 survivor's guilt a growing issue as reality of loss settles in
  42. 3 medical innovations fueled by COVID-19 that will outlast the pandemic
  43. A global semiconductor shortage highlights a troubling trend: A small and shrinking number of the world's computer chips are made in the US
  44. Biased AI can be bad for your health – here's how to promote algorithmic fairness
  45. Growing food and protecting nature don't have to conflict – here's how they can work together
  46. Vaccinated and ready to party? Not so fast, says the CDC, but you can gather with other vaccinated people
  47. New York Gov. Cuomo is the textbook example of how not to apologize
  48. Growing cannabis indoors produces a lot of greenhouse gases – just how much depends on where it's grown
  49. Alumni gratitude and support for causes are behind donations of $50 million or more to colleges and universities
  50. Is gaming good for kids?