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The Conversation

What's in a name for a vaccine campaign? Maybe the end of the pandemic

  • Written by Katherine A. Foss, Professor of Media Studies, Middle Tennessee State University
imageAn unidentified doctor talks with a boy who holds a lollipop reward after participating in a measles vaccine research program in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, in 1963. NASA/PhotoQuest/Getty Images

Nearly 50 million people in the U.S. had received at least one dose of the coronavirus vaccine by March 1, and millions of others have spent hours online...

Read more: What's in a name for a vaccine campaign? Maybe the end of the pandemic

Why using reconciliation to pass Biden's COVID-19 stimulus bill violates the original purpose of the process

  • Written by Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation US
imageSpeaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and other top Democrats meet with reporters before the House voted to pass a $1.9 trillion pandemic relief package on Feb. 26, 2021. AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite

Reconciliation – it’s a term federal budget experts would understand, but for the rest of us, it sounds like what you do with a family member...

Read more: Why using reconciliation to pass Biden's COVID-19 stimulus bill violates the original purpose of...

Colleges confront their links to slavery and wrestle with how to atone for past sins

  • Written by Calvin Schermerhorn, Professor of History, Arizona State University
imageStudents at Georgetown University protest in 2019, demanding the school make amends for its history with reparations. Michael Robinson Chavez/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Colleges and universities across the U.S. have been taking a hard look at their ties to slavery.

This isn’t an entirely new phenomenon. Back in 2006, Brown University...

Read more: Colleges confront their links to slavery and wrestle with how to atone for past sins

As death approaches, our dreams offer comfort, reconciliation

  • Written by Carine Mardorossian, Professor of English, University at Buffalo
imageAs death approaches, relationships can be resurrected, love revived and forgiveness achieved.DeAgostini/Getty Images

One of the most devastating elements of the coronavirus pandemic has been the inability to personally care for loved ones who have fallen ill.

Again and again, grieving relatives have testified to how much more devastating their...

Read more: As death approaches, our dreams offer comfort, reconciliation

What the mythical figure of Şahmeran in Turkey represents and why activists use it

  • Written by Christiane Gruber, Professor of Islamic Art, University of Michigan
imageA pro-LGBTQ poster at Bosphorus University in Turkey with the image of the mythical creature Şahmeran.Via Twitter

At the center of recent protests over civil liberties and religious sensibilities in Turkey looms a half-woman, half-snake figure known as Şahmeran.

The mythical creature was included in a pro-LGBTQ poster on display at a...

Read more: What the mythical figure of Şahmeran in Turkey represents and why activists use it

What's really driving coal power's demise?

  • Written by David Drake, Assistant Professor of Strategy, Entrepreneurship and Operations Management, University of Colorado Boulder
imageThe use of coal for electric power has been declining fast in the U.S.AP Photo/J. David Ake

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

People often point to plunging natural gas prices as the reason U.S. coal-fired power plants have been shutting down at a faster pace in recent years. However, new research shows...

Read more: What's really driving coal power's demise?

6 COVID-19 treatments helping patients survive

  • Written by William G. Bain, Assistant Professor of Medicine, University of Pittsburgh
imageNew treatments target different stages of COVID-19, including before patients become sick enough to need a hospital.Juan Monino via Getty Images

A year ago, when U.S. health authorities issued their first warning that COVID-19 would cause severe “disruption to everyday life,” doctors had no effective treatments to offer beyond...

Read more: 6 COVID-19 treatments helping patients survive

Why do flowers smell?

  • Written by Richard L. Harkess, Professor of Floriculture and Ornamental Horticulture, Mississippi State University
imageA floral scent can be enjoyable for a person, but it has an important job for the flower.Richard L. Harkess, CC BY-NDimage

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


Why do flowers smell? – Henry E., Age 9, Somerville, Massachusetts


Imag...

Read more: Why do flowers smell?

What the Bible's approach to history can teach us about America's glory and shame

  • Written by Mark K. George, Professor of Bible and Ancient Systems of Thought, Iliff School of Theology

How Black people in the 19th century used photography as a tool for social change

  • Written by Samantha Hill, 2019 - 2021 Joyce Bock Fellow at the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan and current graduate student at U-M School of Information, University of Michigan
imageJubilee singers at Fisk University, in Nashville, Tennessee, pose for promotional photograph, circa 1871.William L. Clements Library

Frederick Douglass is perhaps best known as an abolitionist and intellectual. But he was also the most photographed American of the 19th century. And he encouraged the use of photography to promote social change for...

Read more: How Black people in the 19th century used photography as a tool for social change

More Articles ...

  1. Ensuring the minimum wage keeps up with economic growth would be the best way to help workers and preserve FDR's legacy
  2. Polar bears have captivated artists' imaginations for centuries, but what they've symbolized has changed over time
  3. A less Trumpy version of Trumpism might be the future of the Republican Party
  4. There was a time reparations were actually paid out – just not to formerly enslaved people
  5. What are phthalates, and how do they put children's health at risk?
  6. Meatpacking plants have been deadly COVID-19 hot spots – but policies that encourage workers to show up sick are legal
  7. Can vaccinated people still spread the coronavirus?
  8. Misinformation-spewing cable companies come under scrutiny
  9. How does the Johnson Johnson vaccine compare to other coronavirus vaccines? 4 questions answered
  10. Alexei Navalny leads Russians in a historic battle against arbitrary rule, with words echoing Catherine the Great
  11. Facebook's news blockade in Australia shows how tech giants are swallowing the web
  12. Deported veterans, stranded far from home after years of military service, press Biden to bring them back
  13. What is fascism?
  14. Audio chatrooms like Clubhouse have become the hot new media by tapping into the age-old appeal of the human voice
  15. What public school students are allowed to say on social media may be about to change
  16. Giving while female: Women are more likely to donate to charities than men of equal means
  17. The exercise pill: How exercise keeps your brain healthy and protects it against depression and anxiety
  18. Many Black Americans aren’t rushing to get the COVID-19 vaccine – a long history of medical abuse suggests why
  19. What's behind $15,000 electricity bills in Texas?
  20. In Texas, price gouging during disasters is illegal – it is also on very shaky ethical ground
  21. AI is killing choice and chance – which means changing what it means to be human
  22. Engineered viruses can fight the rise of antibiotic-resistant bacteria
  23. Relief or stimulus: What's the difference, and what it means for Biden's $1.9 trillion coronavirus package
  24. Black biomedical scientists still lag in research funding – here's why that matters to all Americans
  25. From 'aliens' to 'noncitizens' – the Biden administration is proposing to change a legal term to recognize the humanity of non-Americans
  26. How New York's 19th-century Jews turned Purim into an American party
  27. How Black cartographers put racism on the map of America
  28. When men started to obsess over six-packs
  29. Decision-making experts explain how to avoid arguments over where to get dinner together
  30. Why Black and Hispanic small-business owners have been so badly hit in the pandemic recession
  31. 5 ways parents can help kids avoid gender stereotypes
  32. How Philadelphia's Black churches overcame disease, depression and civil strife
  33. How to really fix COVID-19 vaccine appointment scheduling
  34. Child poverty in the U.S. could be slashed by monthly payments to parents – an idea proved in other rich countries and proposed by a prominent Republican decades ago
  35. Rev. Raphael Warnock's historic US Senate win broke more barriers than you may think
  36. Biden's Cabinet of many women shows other world leaders that US takes gender equality seriously
  37. How safe is your baby food? Company reports show arsenic, lead and other heavy metals – here's what you need to know
  38. An ancient Greek approach to risk and the lessons it can offer the modern world
  39. How safe is your baby food?
  40. What are the origins of Lent?
  41. John Keats' concept of 'negative capability' – or sitting in uncertainty – is needed now more than ever
  42. What I learned when I recreated the famous 'doll test' that looked at how Black kids see race
  43. How do arctic foxes hunt in the snow?
  44. If Big Tech has the will, here are ways research shows self-regulation can work
  45. Keeping trees in the ground where they are already growing is an effective low-tech way to slow climate change
  46. Space Force sounds like a joke thanks to pop culture – that could be a problem for an important military branch
  47. 3 ways companies could offer more father-friendly policies that will help women
  48. Women of color spend more than $8 billion on bleaching creams worldwide every year
  49. Rethinking the US-China fight: Does China really threaten American power abroad?
  50. Why do mass shootings spawn conspiracy theories?