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Should schools provide free breakfast in classrooms?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDoes the place of breakfast matter?David Amsler, CC BY

Child hunger is a serious problem: 48 million Americans, including more than 15 million children, live in households that lack the means to get enough nutritious food on a regular basis. In large cities, about 25 percent of households with children do not have sufficient food.

The federally...

Read more: Should schools provide free breakfast in classrooms?

Could gambling be the secret to saving when rates are so low?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePut it all on green?Roulette table via www.shutterstock.com

Many interest rates in the U.S. are close to zero and even negative in some parts of the world, like Japan.

Not unexpectedly, U.S. savings rates are also quite low as individuals ask themselves: “Why save a lot of money at a bank if I get no return?”

This situation has many commen...

Read more: Could gambling be the secret to saving when rates are so low?

Why we need a 'moon shot' to catalogue the Earth's biodiversity

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWe need other species to survive for the services they provide and the knowledge they can share. Global Environment Facility, CC BY-NC-ND

It’s unlikely that presidential candidates will ever utter the word “biodiversity” while campaigning this year.

Yet among emerging environmental challenges, none has fewer facts or more enduring...

Read more: Why we need a 'moon shot' to catalogue the Earth's biodiversity

Why the charter school debate has moved beyond 'better' or 'worse'

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCharter schools: here to stay?Jari Salomaa, CC BY-NC

The charter school debate is getting even more heated. Recently, charter opponents launched a campaign from the steps of the Massachusetts State House to warn that charter schools were “sapping resources from the traditional schools that serve most minority students, and creating a...

Read more: Why the charter school debate has moved beyond 'better' or 'worse'

Do environmental regulations do more harm or good? Presidential candidates disagree

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFactory smokestacks, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.Joe Brusky/Flickr, CC BY-NC

The first Earth Day was organized on April 22, 1970 to force U.S. leaders to address rising public concerns about pollution and waste. In an election year, it’s a fitting time to compare the leading presidential candidates' approaches to environmental regulation.

Their...

Read more: Do environmental regulations do more harm or good? Presidential candidates disagree

Crackdown on corporate inversions highlights monstrosity of U.S. tax code

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Companies such as drugmaker Pfizer and medical device maker Medtronic that have used a technique called an inversion to reduce their tax bill recently got a smackdown from President Barack Obama:

I am very pleased that the Treasury Department has taken new action to prevent more corporations from taking advantage of one of the most insidious tax...

Read more: Crackdown on corporate inversions highlights monstrosity of U.S. tax code

More Articles ...

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  6. Why grammar mistakes in a short email could make some people judge you
  7. 'Should the U.S. take in more or fewer Syrian refugees?'
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  9. Did you cheat on your taxes? Here's why your days may be numbered
  10. Brazil's thriving soy industry threatens its forests and global climate targets
  11. Where have 4.8 million Syrian refugees gone?
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  13. Why the Internet isn't making us smarter – and how to fight back
  14. Why the baby brain can learn two languages at the same time
  15. How the rich helped create 2016's angry populism
  16. The murky ethics of Gay Talese's 'The Voyeur's Motel'
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  18. Free trade is once again tearing apart the Republican Party
  19. Russia: a global energy powerhouse that's much more than a petro-state
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  22. How to protect nuclear plants from terrorists
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  30. Panama Papers show how easy it is to finance terror using U.S. shell companies
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  32. U.S. companies may need to beef up data privacy – but only for Europeans
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  37. Has Haiti's cholera epidemic become a permanent problem?
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  41. Will we soon see another wave of bird extinctions in the Americas?
  42. Why teachers are unable to stop bias-based bullying
  43. Women's soccer shows how far we've come since Title IX – and what battles remain
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