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The Conversation

Understanding hurricane risks: 5 essential reads

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Environment + Energy Editor, The Conversation
Hurricane Irma passes Cuba and approaches southern Florida on Sunday, Sept. 10, 2017, with Hurricane Jose at lower right.NASA

June 1 marks the start of the 2018 Atlantic hurricane season, with some communities still rebuilding after last year’s largest storms.

The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration is predicting a 75 percent...

Read more: Understanding hurricane risks: 5 essential reads

For many South Korean Christians, reunification with the North is a religious goal

  • Written by Diane Winston, Associate Professor and Knight Center Chair in Media & Religion, University of Southern California, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism
People pray during a special service to wish for a successful inter-Korean summit and peace on the Korea peninsular at a church in Seoul.AP Photo/Ahn Young-joon

A lot has happened on the Korean peninsula in the last few weeks. South Korean president Moon Jae-in and North Korean leader Kim Jong-un met for the first time; Kim took some serious steps...

Read more: For many South Korean Christians, reunification with the North is a religious goal

Why Florida Democrats can't count on the so-called 'black vote'

  • Written by Sharon Austin, Associate Professor of Political Science and Director of African American Studies, University of Florida
Florida's Democratic Sen. Bill Nelson meets with residents of Miami's Little Haiti neighborhood, where Donald Trump also campaigned in 2016.AP Photo/Alan Diaz

Florida’s midterm Senate election is a race to watch this November – and not just because it will be a tight match pitting a sitting governor, Republican Rick Scott, against a...

Read more: Why Florida Democrats can't count on the so-called 'black vote'

Falsehoods, Sandy Hook and suing Alex Jones

  • Written by Enrique Armijo, Associate Professor of Law and Associate Dean of Academic Affairs, Elon University
Funeral services took place for Benjamin Andrew Wheeler, one of the students killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, while a hearse with another shooting victim drives byAP Photo/Julio Cortez

Alex Jones, a well-known media personality, falsely claims you were an accomplice in faking the murder of your own child.

You sue him.

It seems...

Read more: Falsehoods, Sandy Hook and suing Alex Jones

Do bouncers at clubs enforce dress codes equally across races?

  • Written by Reuben A. Buford May, Presidential Professor of Sociology, Texas A&M University

When videotape surfaced of two men being arrested at a Philadelphia Starbucks for loitering, some criticized the store manager, questioning whether she wrongly evaluated the men as criminal because of both their race and the way they were dressed.

While Starbucks managers may be called upon sometimes to evaluate their customers’ appearance,...

Read more: Do bouncers at clubs enforce dress codes equally across races?

Disappointed donors can't count on getting their charitable money back

  • Written by Terri Lynn Helge, Professor of Law, Texas A&M University
When Garth Brooks felt that a charity had done him wrong he got his money back. Invision/AP Photo/Chris Pizzello

A wealthy family recently sued the University of Chicago for allegedly not living up to promises the school made before getting a US$100 million pledge, claims the university says lack merit. Another rich donor rescinded a $14 million...

Read more: Disappointed donors can't count on getting their charitable money back

Blood in your veins is not blue – here's why it's always red

  • Written by Marisia Fikiet, Ph.D. Student in Chemistry, University at Albany, State University of New York
Is it always the same?Elnur/Shutterstock.com

Whenever you see blood outside your body, it looks red. Why?

Heme is the part of the hemoglobin molecule that latches onto oxygen and then releases it to tissues around the body.Waikwanlai, CC BY

Human blood is red because of the protein hemoglobin, which contains a red-colored compound called heme...

Read more: Blood in your veins is not blue – here's why it's always red

SpongeBob's Bikini Bottom is based on a real-life test site for nuclear weapons

  • Written by Holly M. Barker, Senior Lecturer, University of Washington

“Who lives in a pineapple under the sea?”

My anthropology class replied, “SpongeBob Squarepants.” Their thunderous response filled the auditorium.

Nearly 20 years ago, the underwater world of SpongeBob and his quirky, colorful friends debuted as a cartoon. The cultural icon is now a Broadway musical, up for 12 Tony awards.

My...

Read more: SpongeBob's Bikini Bottom is based on a real-life test site for nuclear weapons

For NFL players, social media is key to winning PR battle over anthem protests

  • Written by Galen Clavio, Associate Professor of Sports Media; Director of the National Sports Journalism Center, Indiana University
The power of players extends well beyond on-field actions.AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill

As the furor over NFL players taking a knee during the national anthem rekindles, the full power of the players themselves has not yet come into play. Presidential politics and U.S. culture wars combined to make the issue a dominant subplot of the 2017 NFL season. In...

Read more: For NFL players, social media is key to winning PR battle over anthem protests

What's behind Italy's crisis and why it matters

  • Written by Bruno Pellegrino, PhD Candidate in Business Economics, University of California, Los Angeles
Giuseppe Conte is Italy's newest prime minister. AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia

Editor’s note: Italy managed to form a government after briefly slipping into political crisis, which sent markets around the world into a panic as investors fretted about the fate of the European Union. The crisis began on May 27 when the political party that won the...

Read more: What's behind Italy's crisis and why it matters

More Articles ...

  1. Teenage depression: If a parent doesn't get treatment for a child, is that abuse?
  2. Why Puerto Rico’s death toll from Hurricane Maria is so much higher than officials thought
  3. Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para salvar a su familia
  4. Deportado dos veces, este hombre lucha para ayudar a la supervivencia de su familia
  5. Juul: Why a trendy e-cig is causing a social – and public health – commotion
  6. Immigration agents X-raying migrants to determine age isn't just illegal, it's a misuse of science
  7. Why poverty is rising faster in suburbs than in cities
  8. In praise of doing nothing
  9. How can criminals manipulate cryptocurrency markets?
  10. Will Silicon Valley's new company towns end up as failed utopias?
  11. Missouri's dark money scandal, explained
  12. How the US benefits when it educates future world leaders
  13. The sage grouse isn't just a bird – it's a proxy for control of Western lands
  14. Why ABC reacted so swiftly to Roseanne's racist tweet
  15. Triclosan, a common antimicrobial in toothpaste and other products, linked to inflammation and cancer in the gut
  16. Organs-on-chips: Tiny technology helping bring safe new drugs to patients faster
  17. Most CEOs aren't abandoning neutrality on Trump – yet
  18. Many Republican mayors are advancing climate-friendly policies without saying so
  19. Colombia's presidential runoff will be a yet another referendum on peace
  20. US fertility is dropping. Here's why some experts saw it coming
  21. 5 Latino authors you should be reading now
  22. Scott Pruitt's desk is more impressive than yours
  23. New federal policy would hike student spacecraft costs, threatening technology education
  24. The federal government has long treated Nevada as a dumping ground, and it's not just Yucca Mountain
  25. Lab coats help students see themselves as future scientists
  26. Can this bird adapt to a warmer climate? Read the genes to find out
  27. NFL tells players patriotism is more important than protest – here's why that didn't work during WWI
  28. Mormons confront a history of Church racism
  29. Philip Roth's journey from 'enemy of the Jews' to great Jewish-American novelist
  30. The forgotten history of Memorial Day
  31. How Christian media is shaping American politics
  32. How one 'Rosie the Riveter' poster won out over all the others and became a symbol of female empowerment
  33. Why the Catholic church is 'hemorrhaging' priests
  34. Informants aren't spies – they're essential FBI tools
  35. A brief history of American winemaking
  36. Bendable concrete, with a design inspired by seashells, can make US infrastructure safer and more durable
  37. Self-cloning Asian tick causing worry in New Jersey
  38. New migraine drug: A neurologist explains how it works
  39. What's wrong with secret donor agreements like the ones George Mason University inked with the Kochs
  40. Why we hate making financial decisions – and what to do about it
  41. Federal judge rules Trump's Twitter account is a public forum
  42. Venezuela is now a dictatorship
  43. Peer rejection isn't the culprit behind school shootings
  44. Some Sunnis voted for a Shiite – and 3 more takeaways from the Iraqi election
  45. What's in your genome? Parents-to-be want to know
  46. Why medicine leads the professions in suicide, and what we can do about it
  47. Women's higher education was pioneered by evangelical Christian leaders
  48. Would Rachel Carson eat organic?
  49. Could protest curb school violence? Lessons from the opt-out movement
  50. How 'media snacks' – from HQ Trivia to Candy Crush – are transforming the workplace