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Is the NRA an educational organization? A lobby group? A nonprofit? A media outlet? Yes

  • Written by Samuel Brunson, Professor of Law, Loyola University Chicago
NRA volunteer shooting instructors Vern Marion and Brian Beck, firing at targets in 2002. AP Photo/Debra Reid

The National Rifle Association has hit more turbulence since 17 people died in the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, than the nation’s biggest gun advocacy group is accustomed to after such...

Read more: Is the NRA an educational organization? A lobby group? A nonprofit? A media outlet? Yes

Trump meets Kim Jong Un: 5 essential reads

  • Written by Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation US
U.S. President Donald Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un featured in a South Korean news program.AP

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of stories from The Conversation’s archive.

In an unexpected development, President Donald Trump and North Korean dictator Kim Jong Un have agreed to meet and discuss improving relations.

Ove...

Read more: Trump meets Kim Jong Un: 5 essential reads

Why child care costs more than college tuition - and how to make it more affordable

  • Written by Taryn Morrissey, Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy, American University
A teaching assistant helps a child with glue at Redwood Early Learning Center in North Little Rock, Arkansas.Danny Johnston/AP

Amid the continually rising cost of tuition, the idea of free college has received growing attention over the past few years. For instance, from 2014 to 2017, 35 states took up 80 bills related to free college.

Early care...

Read more: Why child care costs more than college tuition - and how to make it more affordable

There are dozens of sea snake species in the Indian and Pacific oceans, but none in the Atlantic or Caribbean. Why?

  • Written by Harvey Lillywhite, Professor of Biology and Director, Seahorse Key Marine Laboratory, University of Florida
Yellow-bellied sea snake (_Hydrophis platurus_).Coleman M. Sheehy III, Florida Museum of Natural History, CC BY-ND

Beachgoers often find unusual things that have washed up with the tides. But many people were surprised when a venomous yellow-bellied sea snake recently was found alive on California’s Newport Beach. Sea snakes are less...

Read more: There are dozens of sea snake species in the Indian and Pacific oceans, but none in the Atlantic...

Arbitration as a way out of the North Korean crisis

  • Written by Ronald Sievert, Senior Lecturer in Government, Texas A&M University

According to latest polls, a majority of Americans see North Korea as the greatest immediate threat to the U.S. with as many as 73 percent concerned about Kim Jung Un’s use of nuclear weapons. The world lives in fear that one more provocation in the form of a North Korean missile or nuclear test could lead to major war on the Korean...

Read more: Arbitration as a way out of the North Korean crisis

Why child care costs more than college tuition – and how to make it more affordable

  • Written by Taryn Morrissey, Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy, American University
A teaching assistant helps a child with glue at Redwood Early Learning Center in North Little Rock, Arkansas.Danny Johnston/AP

Amid the continually rising cost of tuition, the idea of free college has received growing attention over the past few years. For instance, from 2014 to 2017, 35 states took up 80 bills related to free college.

Early care...

Read more: Why child care costs more than college tuition – and how to make it more affordable

Influenza's wild origins in the animals around us

  • Written by Jonathan Runstadler, Professor of Infectious Disease and Global Health, Cummings School of Veterinary Medicine, Tufts University
People and animals live side by side – and can have pathogens in common.Nichola Hill, CC BY-ND

In the early 20th century, the leading cause of death was infectious disease. Epidemics erupted with little warning, seemingly out of the blue. When the “Great Influenza” struck in 1918, it killed thousands of people a week in American...

Read more: Influenza's wild origins in the animals around us

How to get more Americans to volunteer

  • Written by Rebecca Nesbit, Associate Professor of Public Administration and Policy, School of Public and International Affairs, University of Georgia
Volunteers assemble food to be distributed to low-income schoolchildren in Pittsburgh through a government-funded program.AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

Alexis de Tocqueville, the 19th-century Frenchman fascinated by U.S. life, praised what he saw during his travels across the new nation as an unusual eagerness to volunteer.

Today, Americans volunteer as...

Read more: How to get more Americans to volunteer

100 years later, the madness of daylight saving time endures

  • Written by Michael Downing, Lecturer in Creative Writing, Tufts University
Unfortunately, there's not an unlimited amount of daylight that we can squeeze out of our clocks.igorstevanovic/Shutterstock.com

One hundred years after Congress passed the first daylight saving legislation, lawmakers in Florida this week passed the “Sunshine Protection Act,” which will make daylight saving a year-round reality in the...

Read more: 100 years later, the madness of daylight saving time endures

George W. Bush tried steel tariffs. It didn't work

  • Written by William Hauk, Associate Professor of Economics, University of South Carolina

President Donald Trump finally followed through on his almost year-old threat to restrict imports of foreign steel.

On March 8, the president slapped a 25 percent tariff on the metal, while also putting a 10 percent duty on foreign aluminum. After initially suggesting there’d be no exceptions, Trump promised to be “very flexible”...

Read more: George W. Bush tried steel tariffs. It didn't work

More Articles ...

  1. Want better sex? Try getting better sleep
  2. School shooters: What can law enforcement do to stop them?
  3. Why is sarcasm so difficult to detect in texts and emails?
  4. Why big bets on educational reform haven't fixed the US school system
  5. Let them eat carp: Fish farms are helping to fight hunger
  6. Perish not publish? New study quantifies the lack of female authors in scientific journals
  7. Very few women oversee US companies. Here's how to change that
  8. Female presidents don't always help women while in office, study in Latin America finds
  9. Why it's so important for kids to see diverse TV and movie characters
  10. Purdue-Kaplan deal blurs lines between for-profit and public colleges
  11. If polls say people want gun control, why doesn't Congress just pass it?
  12. West Virginia teachers win raise – but nation's rural teachers are still underpaid
  13. Why are we so sleep deprived, and why does it matter?
  14. Using blockchain to secure the 'internet of things'
  15. The dark side of daylight saving time
  16. Uneasy US-Mexico relationship will survive ambassador's resignation — but just barely
  17. While Mexico plays politics with its water, some cities flood and others go dry
  18. DACA deadline passes, Congress fails to act and fate of 'Dreamers' remains uncertain: 6 essential reads
  19. GOP tax law snubs US expats and 'accidental Americans'
  20. How vaccination is helping to prevent another flu pandemic
  21. Bioengineers today emphasize the crucial ingredient Dr. Frankenstein forgot – responsibility
  22. For tech giants, a cautionary tale from 19th century railroads on the limits of competition
  23. Most panhandling laws are unconstitutional since there's no freedom from speech
  24. Italy’s economy has 'cronyism disease,' but will its next government treat it?
  25. Cutting pollution in the Chesapeake Bay has helped underwater grasses rebound
  26. Pope Francis won't support women in the priesthood, but here's what he could do
  27. The Cold War's toxic legacy: Costly, dangerous cleanups at atomic bomb production sites
  28. Republicans attacking Obamacare, one more time
  29. Food scholarships could help more students finish college
  30. 'Trade wars are good'? 3 past conflicts tell a very different story
  31. Could there be another Billy Graham?
  32. Will the United States ever get back on a bipartisan 'Middle Way?'
  33. How historical disease detectives are solving mysteries of the 1918 flu
  34. When can you buy a gun, vote or be sentenced to death? Science suggests US should revise legal age limits
  35. In Italy, fake news helps populists and far-right triumph
  36. #MeToo on the 1930s silver screen
  37. Will holding the cheese and chocolate milk on Happy Meals make a difference?
  38. The hidden threat of teacher stress
  39. Friend or food? Why Venus flytraps don't eat their pollinators
  40. Why you should vote for a woman in 2018
  41. It's a turbulent world. Stop stressing and adapt
  42. Why the daunting economics of elder care are about to get much worse
  43. Should you send a text or email? Here's some advice from Aristotle
  44. How people talk now holds clues about human migration centuries ago
  45. Economic history shows why Trump's 'America First' tariff policy is so dangerous
  46. Amazonian dirt roads are choking Brazil's tropical streams
  47. The NRA's video channel is a hotbed of online hostility
  48. Schools shouldn't wait for red flags to address student mental health needs
  49. The history of the Hollywood sign, from public nuisance to symbol of stardom
  50. How the devastating 1918 flu pandemic helped advance US women's rights