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The Conversation

To empower women, give them better access to water

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Imagine going through your day without ready access to clean water for drinking, cooking, washing or bathing. Around the world, 663 million people face that challenge every day. They get their water from sources that are considered unsafe because they are vulnerable to contamination, such as rivers, streams, ponds and unprotected wells. And the...

Read more: To empower women, give them better access to water

Will the end of breeding orcas at SeaWorld change much for animals in captivity?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageNo more breeding, but still on exhibit.Business Navigatoren, CC BY-SA

When SeaWorld announced it would stop breeding orcas and begin to phase out “theatrical performances” using the animals, the news appeared to mark a significant change in ideas about animals and captivity.

Wayne Pacelle, president of the Humane Society of the United...

Read more: Will the end of breeding orcas at SeaWorld change much for animals in captivity?

Global warming is pushing wine harvests earlier – but not necessarily for the better

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDroughts have traditionally yielded good vintages in France, but changing conditions are forcing wine growers to adapt.lewismd13/flickr, CC BY-NC-SA

Wine grapes are one of the most valuable horticultural crops in the world, a globally important industry with commercial vineyards on six continents and all 50 U.S. states. Like many crops, these...

Read more: Global warming is pushing wine harvests earlier – but not necessarily for the better

What we've learned from the deadly Oso, Washington landslide two years on

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBefore and after the Oso landslide in 2014.Joseph Wartman, CC BY-ND

On March 22, 2014, a hillside above Oso, Washington collapsed, unleashing a torrent of mud and debris that buried the community of Steelhead Haven. Forty-three people lost their lives, making it one of the single deadliest landslide disasters in U.S. history.

Over the past two...

Read more: What we've learned from the deadly Oso, Washington landslide two years on

How the Grand Canyon changed our ideas of natural beauty

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSunrise on Angel's Window, North Rim, Grand Canyon National Park. National Park Service/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

Few sights are as instantly recognizable, and few sites speak more fully to American nationalism. Standing on the South Rim in 1903, President Teddy Roosevelt proclaimed it “one of the great sights every American should see.”

It&rsq...

Read more: How the Grand Canyon changed our ideas of natural beauty

A nation at risk -- how gifted, low-income kids are left behind

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat makes gifted kids from advantaged families get ahead?David Woo, CC BY-ND

In 1983, the National Commission on Excellence in Education published A Nation At Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform, which documented widespread academic underachievement at every level, concluding:

For the first time in the history of our country, the...

Read more: A nation at risk -- how gifted, low-income kids are left behind

In TV's shifting landscape, advertisers scramble to adapt

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

A television commercial is a 15- or 30-second interruption of a program – or so most of us born before 2000 assume.

However, a recent story arc on the popular Fox program “Empire” involved a character making a commercial for Pepsi – a commercial that actually appeared during the episode. Popular Vine users have appeared in...

Read more: In TV's shifting landscape, advertisers scramble to adapt

Radiation combined with immune-stimulating drugs could pack a powerful punch against cancer cells

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

In his final State of the Union address, President Obama tasked Vice President Joe Biden with leading a new National Cancer Moonshot initiative. The hope is that this will put America on course to be “the country that cures cancer once and for all.” Listed among the cutting-edge research areas of the initiative is a class of treatments...

Read more: Radiation combined with immune-stimulating drugs could pack a powerful punch against cancer cells

What two legal scholars learned from studying 70 years of Supreme Court confirmation hearings

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Joe Biden called them a “kabuki dance.” Elena Kagan called them a “vapid and hollow charade.”

So Supreme Court confirmation hearings are worthless, right?

Wrong.

Our research moves beyond the conventional wisdom espoused by Biden, Kagan and others, and presents a strong case for an alternative view of the hearings. Examining...

Read more: What two legal scholars learned from studying 70 years of Supreme Court confirmation hearings

Fighting superbugs with nanotechnology and light

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA quantum dot: A high-resolution transmission electron micrograph of cadmium telluride nanoparticles. (The scale bar in the lower right is 2 nanometers long, or two millionths of a millimeter.)Nagpal Group, University of Colorado, CC BY-ND

A new tool is emerging in the fight against antibiotic-resistant bacterial disease. Beyond the global efforts...

Read more: Fighting superbugs with nanotechnology and light

More Articles ...

  1. As Obama makes historic visit, is Cuba ready for change?
  2. Polar bears, Princess Diana, gun rights: The opinions of Obama's Supreme Court nominee, Merrick Garland
  3. Does the First Amendment protect people who film the police?
  4. Acne treatment: antibiotics don't need to kill bacteria to clear up your skin
  5. Picture of Pluto further refined by months of New Horizons data
  6. How do children decide what's fair?
  7. A look inside the Czech Republic's booming fertility holiday industry
  8. Beyond today's crowdsourced science to tomorrow's citizen science cyborgs
  9. Net neutrality may be at risk when companies like Netflix subsidize your data
  10. Roots of opioid epidemic can be traced back to two key changes in pain management
  11. Will cheap gas at the pump stall progress on car emissions?
  12. What kind of judge is Supreme Court nominee Merrick Garland?
  13. How Bernie Sanders made the Democratic Party safe for liberals
  14. How much math do you need to win your March Madness pool?
  15. Zika and abortion: will the virus prompt Latin America to rethink abortion and birth control?
  16. In a state wrought with racial tension, Jackie Robinson suited up for his first spring training game
  17. The view from Ohio: Kasich's win and what's next
  18. Recalculating! By not driving the optimal route, you're causing traffic jams
  19. 'Acceptable risk' is a better way to think about radiation exposure in Fukushima
  20. The last time an outsider like Trump crashed the GOP? 1940
  21. A new way to detect tsunamis: cargo ships
  22. One hundred years of 'birther' arguments
  23. From emerging to submerging: the debt burden killing off the age of the BRICS
  24. March Madness means money – it's time to talk about who's getting paid
  25. We've been measuring inequality wrong – here's the real story
  26. Here's another reason why many community college students do not get their degree
  27. Pi pops up where you don't expect it
  28. Letting kids stand more in the classroom could help them learn
  29. Is your March Madness bracket really better than mine?
  30. Why we have the most polarized Supreme Court in history
  31. Inspired by Kim Kardashian, a feverish legion of followers struggle to achieve online fame
  32. Public universities must do more: the public needs our help and expertise
  33. The search for the value of pi
  34. What do special educators need to succeed?
  35. BPS, a popular substitute for BPA in consumer products, may not be safer
  36. Never mind SpaceX's Falcon 9, where's my Millennium Falcon?
  37. Can we 'vaccinate' plants to boost their immunity?
  38. What AI can tell us about the U.S. Supreme Court
  39. Supreme Court losing luster in public’s eyes
  40. When good intentions aren't supported by social science evidence: diversity research and policy
  41. Are looser gun laws changing the social fabric of Missouri?
  42. Do polygamous marriages among liberal arts disciplines produce better scientists?
  43. Beyond silicon: the search for new semiconductors
  44. Why March 15 will be make-or-break for the presidential candidates
  45. Trump's campaign rhetoric, ISIS and the law of war
  46. Adding folic acid to staple foods can prevent birth defects, but most countries don't do it
  47. Shipwreck records and tree rings unveil Caribbean hurricane history – and clues to the future
  48. U.S. is a land of plenty, so why do millions of Americans still go hungry?
  49. Microwave repairs might annihilate zombie potholes once and for all
  50. How Donald Trump gets away with saying things other candidates can't