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If the Romance Writers of America can implode over racism, no group is safe

  • Written by Christine Larson, Assistant Professor of Journalism, University of Colorado Boulder
While 97% of Romance Writers of America members are women, only 14% are people of color.Photo by Bill O'Leary/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Over the past month, Romance Writers of America, one of the country’s largest writing associations, with over 9,000 members, has erupted in a race-related scandal.

The controversy began when...

Read more: If the Romance Writers of America can implode over racism, no group is safe

What a bundle of buzzing bees can teach engineers about robotic materials

  • Written by Orit Peleg, Assistant Professor of Computer Science, University of Colorado Boulder
Individuals working together as one.Orit Peleg and Jacob Peters, CC BY-ND

Gathered inside a small shed in the midst of a peaceful meadow, my colleagues and I are about to flip the switch to start a seemingly mundane procedure: using a motor to shake a wooden board. But underneath this board, we have a swarm of roughly 10,000 honeybees, clinging to...

Read more: What a bundle of buzzing bees can teach engineers about robotic materials

Stoneflies and mayflies, canaries of our streams

  • Written by Boris Kondratieff, Professor of Entomology and Curator of the C. P. Gillette Museum of Arthropod Diversity, Colorado State University
The presence of mayflies and stone flies indicates clean water is nearby.Andrew/flickr, CC BY-NC

Experienced anglers recognize that for a trout, the ultimate “steak dinner” is a stonefly or mayfly. That’s why fly fishing enthusiasts will go to extreme lengths to imitate these graceful, elegant and fragile insects.

I share their...

Read more: Stoneflies and mayflies, canaries of our streams

When politicians turn immigration into a 'crisis,' they hurt their own people

  • Written by Megan A. Carney, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, University of Arizona
An Italian official gestures at migrants waiting to disembark in the Sicilian port of Catania in August 2018.Giovanni Isolino/AFP via Getty Images

A massive influx of immigrants on the southern border led to record numbers of people entering the country without legal permission, record numbers of migrant deaths and the criminalization of...

Read more: When politicians turn immigration into a 'crisis,' they hurt their own people

Snacks after youth sports add more calories than kids burn while playing, study says

  • Written by Jay Maddock, Professor of Public Health, Texas A&M University
Clark Moss, 12, of Gilbert, Ariz., shows the chips and drink he received after his soccer match, Jan. 18, 2020.Kristi Moss, CC BY-SA

Youth sports leagues are a great way for children to get physical activity, develop teamwork and create friendships. Research has shown that youth who participate in sports leagues are eight times as likely to be...

Read more: Snacks after youth sports add more calories than kids burn while playing, study says

Is secondhand screen time the new secondhand smoking?

  • Written by Joelle Renstrom, Lecturer of Rhetoric, Boston University
Babies need to make eye contact with people, not phones.AFP via Getty

The Environmental Protection Agency first warned of secondhand smoke in 1991, some 30 years after scientists determined that smoking cigarettes causes cancer. Today, a growing body of research points toward a new indirect health hazard.

Just as frequently being around other people...

Read more: Is secondhand screen time the new secondhand smoking?

Where are the Hispanic executives?

  • Written by JD Swerzenski, Ph.D. Candidate in Communication, University of Massachusetts Amherst
American executives only represent a fraction of the workforce.UfaBizPhoto/The Conversation

Many organizations have prioritized workplace equality and access to high-paying, executive level jobs for minority groups in recent years.

Several 2020 presidential candidates are putting forward plans to increase minority executive positions by diversifing...

Read more: Where are the Hispanic executives?

Is it ethical to show Holocaust images?

  • Written by Paul Morrow, Human Rights Fellow, University of Dayton
A wall-size image at the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum that shows Jewish prisoners marching. The Nazis killed prisoners during these marches.AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez

Seventy-five years ago, the world first saw the horrors of Nazi concentration camps.

Shot by photographers Lee Miller, George Rodger and others, and published in Time, the...

Read more: Is it ethical to show Holocaust images?

Giving is changing as philanthropy faces more scrutiny

  • Written by Emily Schwartz Greco, Philanthropy + Nonprofits Editor, The Conversation
The foundation Bill and Melinda Gates run has more assets than any other. AP Photo/Elaine Thompson

The more than US$400 billion Americans donate annually to charitable causes of all kinds, such as houses of worship, universities and efforts to cure cancer, add up to around 2% of the economy. The Indiana University Lilly Family School of...

Read more: Giving is changing as philanthropy faces more scrutiny

Vital Hasson, the Jew who worked for the Nazis, hunted down refugees and tore apart families in WWII Greece

  • Written by Sarah Abrevaya Stein, Professor of History, Maurice Amado Chair in Sephardic Studies, Sady and Ludwig Kahn Director, Alan D. Leve Center for Jewish Studies, UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles
Jewish youth on a sailboat in Salonika harbor, 1929,United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, courtesy of Gabriel Albocher

I learned a lesson when conducting research for my recently published book, “Family Papers: a Sephardic Journey Through the Twentieth Century.” I had discovered the story of a young Jewish man forgotten to history...

Read more: Vital Hasson, the Jew who worked for the Nazis, hunted down refugees and tore apart families in...

More Articles ...

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  5. What to think when you're thinking about impeachment: 5 essential reads
  6. Native people did not use fire to shape New England's landscape
  7. Impeachment trial senators swear an oath aimed at guarding 'against malice, falsehood, and evasion'
  8. Bill de Blasio's bagel gaffe and the fraught politics of food
  9. 'Lennon Walls' herald a sticky-note revolution in Hong Kong
  10. How a heritage of black preaching shaped MLK's voice in calling for justice
  11. Why bosses should let employees surf the web at work
  12. Identifying aquatic plants with drones could be the key to reducing a parasitic infection in people
  13. What is a bar mitzvah?
  14. I asked people why they don't vote, and this is what they told me
  15. A Navy scandal sheds light on the nature of bribery and the limits of free speech
  16. Black kids and suicide: Why are rates so high, and so ignored?
  17. The first step in managing plastic waste is measuring it – here's how we did it for one Caribbean country
  18. Why teen depression rates are rising faster for girls than boys
  19. US and Iran have a long, troubled history
  20. Why you need more Vitamin D in the winter
  21. Why do onions make you cry?
  22. What do we want? Unbiased reporting! When do we want it? During protests!
  23. US-China trade pact President Trump just signed fails to resolve 3 fundamental issues
  24. Russia's cabinet resigns and it's all part of Putin's plan
  25. Screen time: Conclusions about the effects of digital media are often incomplete, irrelevant or wrong
  26. What Iranians think of the US and their own government
  27. Supreme Court DACA decision isn't just about Dreamers -- it's about whether the White House has to tell the truth
  28. Who is born a US citizen?
  29. An old debate over religion in school is opening up again
  30. Meet the narwhal, 'unicorn of the sea'
  31. Why fitness trackers may not give you all the 'credit' you hoped for
  32. 3 quotes that defined the first Democratic debate of 2020
  33. Earthquake forecast for Puerto Rico: Dozens more large aftershocks are likely
  34. Worrying about being drafted doesn't mean you're disloyal – it's an old American tradition
  35. Parental leave laws are failing single parents
  36. How Prohibition changed the way Americans drink, 100 years ago
  37. 'Uncut Gems' celebrates Manhattan’s Diamond District, a neighborhood that's a window into the past
  38. Think twice before shouting your virtues online – moral grandstanding is toxic
  39. Being copycats might be key to being human
  40. Microwaving sewage waste may make it safe to use as fertilizer on crops
  41. Heading into Iowa: Where do the Democratic candidates stand on health care coverage?
  42. Why the US-Iran conflict isn’t driving oil prices higher – and why it probably should
  43. Can the Constitution stop the government from lying to the public?
  44. The secret origins of presidential polling
  45. What US election officials could learn from Australia about boosting voter turnout
  46. High-priced specialty drugs: Exposing the flaws in the system
  47. Pope ends a secrecy rule for Catholic sexual abuse cases, but for victims many barriers to justice remain
  48. Restricting trade in endangered species can backfire, triggering market booms
  49. Why hip-hop belongs in today's classrooms
  50. Brexit could spell the end of globalization, and the global prosperity that came with it