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'Disillusioned' Brazilians choose Bolsonaro, Haddad after a tense and violent campaign

  • Written by Helder Ferreira do Vale, Associate Professor, Graduate School of International and Area Studies, Hankuk University of Foreign Studies

After a tense, violent and polarized campaign, Brazilians have voted to advance two candidates from opposite sides of the ideological spectrum to a presidential runoff on Oct. 28.

Jair Bolsonaro, a far-right congressman who enjoys strong evangelical backing for his law-and-order stance on policing, support for gun rights and opposition to abortion,...

Read more: 'Disillusioned' Brazilians choose Bolsonaro, Haddad after a tense and violent campaign

Could villains clone themselves to take over the world?

  • Written by Hua Lu, Professor of Biological Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
When many people hear the word cloning, they imagine armies of human clones created for nefarious purposes. andriano.cz/Shutterstock.com

If asked about clones, most people think of evil sci-fi characters. However, in real life, the word “clone” often has broader, far more positive applications. Just as office workers replicate documents...

Read more: Could villains clone themselves to take over the world?

Amazon and other 'superstar' companies could give all American workers a raise

  • Written by Carolin Schellhorn, Assistant Professor of Finance, St. Joseph's University
An Amazon employee applies tape to a package before shipment.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

The latest employment data, released on Oct. 5, point to a persistent economic puzzle: The unemployment rate is the lowest in nearly half a century yet wages have been very slow to react.

In the past, such low unemployment levels have driven up wages. Yet, apart...

Read more: Amazon and other 'superstar' companies could give all American workers a raise

Why more women don't win science Nobels

  • Written by Mary K. Feeney, Associate Professor and Lincoln Professor of Ethics in Public Affairs and Associate Director of the Center for Science, Technology and Environmental Policy Studies, Arizona State University

One of the 2018 Nobel Prizes in physics went to Donna Strickland, a major accomplishment for any scientist. Yet much of the news coverage has focused on the fact that she’s only the third female physicist to receive the award, after Marie Curie in 1903 and Maria Goeppert-Mayer 60 years later.

Though biochemical engineer Frances Arnold also...

Read more: Why more women don't win science Nobels

Warriors against sexual violence win Nobel Peace Prize: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation US

In a world whose attention is fixed on the victims of sexual assault and violence, the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Denis Mukwege of the Congo and Nadia Murad of Iraq “for their efforts to end the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war and armed conflict.”

The two winners, said the Nobel committee in its award announcement,...

Read more: Warriors against sexual violence win Nobel Peace Prize: 4 essential reads

Columbus believed he would find 'blemmyes' and 'sciapods' – not people – in the New World

  • Written by Peter C. Mancall, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of the Humanities, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
The statue of Christopher Columbus in Columbus Circle, New York City.Zoltan Tarlacz/Shutterstock.com

In 1492, when Christopher Columbus crossed the Atlantic Ocean in search of a fast route to East Asia and the southwest Pacific, he landed in a place that was unknown to him. There he found treasures – extraordinary trees, birds and gold.

But...

Read more: Columbus believed he would find 'blemmyes' and 'sciapods' – not people – in the New World

How the loss of Native American languages affects our understanding of the natural world

  • Written by Rosalyn R. LaPier, Associate Professor of Environmental Studies, The University of Montana
Dance is a unique way of passing on cultural stories to a younger generation.Aaron Hawkins/Flickr.com, CC BY-ND

Alaska has a “linguistic emergency,” according to the Alaskan Gov. Bill Walker. A report warned earlier this year that all of the state’s 20 Native American languages might cease to exist by the end of this century, if...

Read more: How the loss of Native American languages affects our understanding of the natural world

Beto O'Rourke won't beat Ted Cruz in Texas – here's why

  • Written by James Henson, Director of the Texas Politics Project and Lecturer, Dept. of Government, University of Texas at Austin

With Election Day now only a few weeks away, the race between incumbent Republican Texas Sen. Ted Cruz and U.S. Rep. Beto O'Rourke has attracted national and international attention.

For Cruz, a star in national conservative politics, losing to O'Rourke would be a particularly bitter pill. Cruz rose to prominence during the heyday of the Tea Party,...

Read more: Beto O'Rourke won't beat Ted Cruz in Texas – here's why

Could an artificial intelligence be considered a person under the law?

  • Written by Roman V. Yampolskiy, Associate Professor of Computer Engineering and Computer Science, University of Louisville
Sophia, a robot granted citizenship in Saudi Arabia.MSC/wikimedia, CC BY

Humans aren’t the only people in society – at least according to the law. In the U.S., corporations have been given rights of free speech and religion. Some natural features also have person-like rights. But both of those required changes to the legal system. A new...

Read more: Could an artificial intelligence be considered a person under the law?

For mothers who lose their babies, donating breast milk is a healing ritual

  • Written by Ayelet Oreg, Ph.D. Candidate, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Donated breast milkAP Photo/Matt Rourke

Stillbirth and neonatal loss are painful in many ways.

But increasingly, some of the more than 24,000 American women whose pregnancies end with the loss of their babies are choosing to do something they find both demanding and healing – giving their breast milk away.

As a social worker, a scholar of...

Read more: For mothers who lose their babies, donating breast milk is a healing ritual

More Articles ...

  1. 'Bystander effect' and sexual assault: What the research says
  2. Massacres, disappearances and 1968: Mexicans remember the victims of a 'perfect dictatorship'
  3. 'Coming of Age in Mississippi' still speaks to nation's racial discord, 50 years later
  4. 5 habilidades matemáticas que los niños en edad preescolar deben aprender: enséñeselas de forma divertida
  5. Why trade deficits aren't so bad
  6. Does a man's social class have anything to do with the likelihood he'll commit sexual assault?
  7. Controversial young adult novel offers insight into Kavanaugh hearings, sexual assault
  8. Think journalism's a tough field today? Try being a reporter in the Gilded Age
  9. Nobel goes to chemists who learned to 'hack' evolution in the lab
  10. Success of immunotherapy stimulates future pigment cell and melanoma research
  11. A proposed tax break for the masses designed to spur giving
  12. Interruptions at Supreme Court confirmation hearings have been rising since the 1980s
  13. New materials are powering the battery revolution
  14. Sexism, racism drive black women to run for office in both Brazil and US
  15. Sexism, racism drive more black women to run for office in both Brazil and US
  16. Después de un desastre: enviar ayuda a donde más se necesita
  17. Fishing forecasts can predict marine creature movements
  18. 50 years old, '2001: A Space Odyssey' still offers insight about the future
  19. 4 things journalists can do to rebuild trust with the public
  20. Ted Turner has Lewy body dementia, but what is that?
  21. How should we judge people for their past moral failings?
  22. Charities take digital money now – and the risks that go with it
  23. 2018 Nobel Prize for physics goes to tools made from light beams – a particle physicist explains
  24. Refugiados de Venezuela huyen a ciudades latinoamericanas, no a campos de refugiados
  25. Refugiados venezolanos inundan las ciudades latinoamericanas
  26. 2018 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine: a turning point in the war on cancer
  27. Kavanaugh sexual assault hearing evokes early Soviet mock trials
  28. Heat is a serious threat to dairy cows – we're finding innovative ways to keep them cool
  29. Why we're training the next generation of lawyers in big data
  30. Safe, efficient self-driving cars could block walkable, livable communities
  31. The Catholic Church resists change – but Vatican II shows it's possible
  32. Brett Kavanaugh goes to the movies
  33. Kids with cellphones more likely to be bullies – or get bullied. Here are 6 tips for parents
  34. Ruth Bader Ginsburg helped shape the modern era of women's rights – before she went on the Supreme Court
  35. Most men do not perpetrate sexual violence against women
  36. How is 'new NAFTA' different? A trade expert explains
  37. The Left’s Gift to Nixon
  38. Politicians have long used the 'forgotten man' to win elections
  39. Trump prophecy and other Christian movements: 3 essential reads
  40. Can 'persuasive technology' change behavior and help people better manage chronic diseases?
  41. We provided psychological first aid after the Las Vegas shooting – here's what we learned
  42. Kavanaugh is a reminder: Accused sexual harassers get promoted anyway
  43. Kavanaugh confirmation a reminder: Accused sexual harassers get promoted anyway
  44. Is a polygraph a reliable lie detector?
  45. Lo que deben saber los adolescentes sobre seguridad cibernética
  46. 50 years of the Boeing 747: How the 'queen of the skies' reigned over air travel
  47. How the media encourages – and sustains – political warfare
  48. On the Supreme Court, difficult nominations have led to historical injustices
  49. Is it immoral to watch football?
  50. US generosity after disasters: 4 questions answered