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What Rousseff's impeachment means for Brazil's struggling millions

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

In Brazil, right-wing parties and politicians are following constitutional procedures to oust the country’s democratically elected president, Dilma Rousseff. They claim that she made improper use of budgetary procedures to bolster her 2014 reelection campaign.

The left calls it an illegitimate coup. They believe the ultimate goal is gutting...

Read more: What Rousseff's impeachment means for Brazil's struggling millions

Trump and Clinton want to bring back millions of outsourced jobs – here's why they can't

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

One of the big themes in the current presidential race is how decades of free trade have dealt a heavy blow to the American worker as millions of jobs were shipped overseas to take advantage of cheap labor.

That’s even turned some pro free-trade Republicans into protectionists. As a result, the candidates are promising to bring these jobs...

Read more: Trump and Clinton want to bring back millions of outsourced jobs – here's why they can't

Chinese philosophy is missing from U.S. philosophy departments. Should we care?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePlato, Confucius, and Aristotle.Wikimedia Commons, CC BY-SA

Philosophy has been a favorite whipping boy in the culture wars since 399 B.C., when an Athenian jury sentenced Socrates to death. Nowadays, philosophers are no longer accused of “corrupting the youth.” Instead, a surprisingly wide range of pundits, from celebrity scientist...

Read more: Chinese philosophy is missing from U.S. philosophy departments. Should we care?

New overtime rule will give economy a boost, but 'ossified' labor law still needs fixing

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTime to punch in.Punch clocks via www.shutterstock.com

The Obama Administration issued new rules this week that will allow millions more Americans to qualify for overtime pay.

The Labor Department regulation, which will take effect in December, will double the annual threshold that helps determine who qualifies for overtime when they work more than...

Read more: New overtime rule will give economy a boost, but 'ossified' labor law still needs fixing

A tale of two oil and gas boomtowns – a boost to the economy, a tricky landing

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDrilling on a farm in North Dakota, site of a huge economic upswing from the oil and gas industry.timevanson/flickr, CC BY-SA

Over roughly the past 10 years, the United States has experienced remarkable growth in the production of natural gas and oil. This growth has taken place across dozens of regions, from the scrub of west Texas to the plains...

Read more: A tale of two oil and gas boomtowns – a boost to the economy, a tricky landing

Hand washing stops infections, so why do health care workers skip it?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLather up.Handwashing via www.shutterstock.com.

Hospital infections affect almost two million people in the United States every year, 100,000 of whom die. Up to 70 percent of these infections could be prevented if health care workers follow recommended protocols, which include hand hygiene.

To me as a physician who studies health quality, it often...

Read more: Hand washing stops infections, so why do health care workers skip it?

Securing web browsing: protecting the Tor network

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAn Internet of the future, where every network connection could be secure.Padlock network via shutterstock.com

There are more than 865 encryption tools in use worldwide, all addressing different aspects of a common problem. People want to protect information: hard drives from oppressive governments, physical location from stalkers, browsing history...

Read more: Securing web browsing: protecting the Tor network

Could the mystery of the meow actually be solved by a new talking cat collar?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHow good are people at interpreting a cat's meow?'Cats' via www.shutterstock.com

Imagine you’re a cat, and, every time you meowed, the loud voice of a snooty-sounding British gentleman kindly informed your human guardian of your every thought and feeling (well, the thoughts and feelings you had before you were terrified by the sound of the...

Read more: Could the mystery of the meow actually be solved by a new talking cat collar?

European data suggests the gig economy helped create Trump, Sanders

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Politicians and pundits in America wonder where the rip-roaring popularity of protest candidates Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders originated. The answer may lie in Europe.

Trump and Sanders, in defying conventional political expectations, follow a long list of European populist leaders. Over the last two decades, the continent has seen the rise of Ma...

Read more: European data suggests the gig economy helped create Trump, Sanders

More Articles ...

  1. New report on GE crops avoids simple answers -- and that's the point, study members say
  2. Why the effects of 2016 El Niño trumped climate change in the Alberta wildfires
  3. Why the history of news explains its future
  4. Big data's 'streetlight effect': where and how we look affects what we see
  5. In a digital archive of fugitive slave ads, a new portrait of slavery emerges
  6. Nanoparticles in baby formula: should parents be worried?
  7. What counts as 'medical marijuana' varies from state to state – and that's a problem
  8. Society's biggest problems need more than a nudge
  9. A 'sixth sense' for humidity helps insects stay out of climatic trouble
  10. Is Dilma Rousseff's impeachment a coup or Brazil's window of opportunity?
  11. Why Obama will have the last laugh
  12. What is Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's real crime?
  13. To better conserve wildlife, consider all kinds of animals, not just the ones we hunt
  14. Does social media help the government-citizen relationship? Depends who you ask
  15. Is the U.S. military strategy doing more harm or good in the Middle East?
  16. Could early music training help babies learn language?
  17. Why cities should stop building museums and focus on festivals
  18. Is it time for a presidential technoethics commission?
  19. America’s ‘exceptional’ lack of a female President in global perspective
  20. How Apple Watch and pervasive computing can lure you into leveling up your fitness
  21. Hard evidence: spanking could lead to health problems, antisocial behavior
  22. Why the eastern coyote should be a separate species: the 'coywolf'
  23. Can Puerto Rico escape its $72 billion debt trap and avoid Greece's fate?
  24. America is 'dropping cyberbombs' -- but how do they work?
  25. Do no harm to life on Mars? Ethical limits of the 'Prime Directive'
  26. How do you design a home for someone with autism?
  27. The White House won't be handed to Clinton
  28. Is addiction a brain disease?
  29. A closer look at reparations
  30. Why bullying needs more efforts to stop it
  31. Will taxpayers foot the cleanup bill for bankrupt coal companies?
  32. Are we ready to raise taxes on the rich? History says no
  33. Are our smartphones afflicting us all with symptoms of ADHD?
  34. Trump and Clinton victorious: proof that US voting system doesn’t work
  35. Can the oil and gas boom teach us how to fix drug problems in America?
  36. Don't let cybercriminals hide from the FBI
  37. Explainer: What is wrong with America's civic education
  38. The Easter Rising 100 years on: how the Irish revolution fired up American politics
  39. Should the U.S. provide reparations for slavery and Jim Crow?
  40. Are income share agreements a good way to pay for college?
  41. How corruption is hurting Mexico City’s efforts to tackle air pollution
  42. Worrying about being a perfect mother makes it harder to be a good parent
  43. Have children? Here's how kids ruin your romantic relationship
  44. Pregnancy: cooperative paradise or conflict-driven battle between mother and child?
  45. Why the stakes are so high for the Black Panther
  46. Simulating evolution: how close do computer models come to reality?
  47. Cybersecurity's weakest link: humans
  48. Reading to your child: the difference it makes
  49. Should Florida 'frack' its limestone for oil and gas? Two geophysicists weigh in
  50. Domestic violence is often omitted from sentencing reforms. Here's why that's a mistake