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Why the curvy new Barbie is good news for your little girl

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhy does this body shape matter so much?napudollworld, CC BY-NC-ND

Mattel recently announced that their half-century-old centerfold would be getting a brand new look. The new Barbie will come in three different body shapes (tall, curvy and petite) and a variety of skin tones, eye colors and hairstyles.

Barbie’s new look is likely the result of...

Read more: Why the curvy new Barbie is good news for your little girl

Organizing a student protest? Have a look at 1970s Germany

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageMay 1968 students' protest in Berlin. Holger.Ellgaard, CC BY-SA

The protests over race and diversity that shook campuses across the U.S. in 2015 continue to reverberate.

In January the president of Ithaca College resigned. In February Princeton University began public discussions of the controversial legacy of its former president and U.S. President...

Read more: Organizing a student protest? Have a look at 1970s Germany

It's time to measure 21st century aging with 21st century tools

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The populations of most countries of the world are aging, prompting a deluge of news stories about slower economic growth, reduced labor force participation, looming pension crises, exploding health care costs and the reduced productivity and cognitive functioning of the elderly.

These stories are dire, in part because the most widely used measure...

Read more: It's time to measure 21st century aging with 21st century tools

Supreme Court sides with EPA on cleaning Chesapeake Bay – and perhaps other waterways

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFertilizer runoff and other activities have 60 percent of Chesapeake Bay in a virtual dead zone.Chesapeake Bay Program, CC BY-NC

In one of the earliest signs of how a divided Supreme Court will deal with environmental cases in the post-Scalia era, the court on February 29 handed the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) a victory over farming...

Read more: Supreme Court sides with EPA on cleaning Chesapeake Bay – and perhaps other waterways

Presidential candidates offer sharp differences on the future of renewable energy

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe Ivanpah Concentrating Solar Electric Generating System, built on public land in California's Mojave Desert.ATOMIC Hot Links/Flickr, CC BY-NC-ND

We are in the middle of a long-term global transition away from fossil fuels and toward more efficient, renewable-based energy systems. This shift will deliver many benefits, including jobs, reduced air...

Read more: Presidential candidates offer sharp differences on the future of renewable energy

How much can the next president influence the U.S. energy system?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe U.S. oil industry is in the doldrums, but there's not much the next (or current) president can do about it. www.shutterstock.com

There have been dramatic changes in the U.S. energy system under our current president – a big drop in the use of coal, a boom in domestic oil and gas development from fracking, and the rapid spread of renewable...

Read more: How much can the next president influence the U.S. energy system?

Should wealthier students get subsidized college education?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageShould college be free for all?Bart Everson, CC BY

Last summer, as the presidential campaign was just getting rolling in earnest, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton announcedNew College Compact,” a proposal designed to provide relief for the rapidly rising sticker price of college.

Subsequently, Senator Bernie Sanders took...

Read more: Should wealthier students get subsidized college education?

Does it matter who wins the election when it comes to the Middle East?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Elections, the perennial wisdom tells us, are generally not decided by foreign policy issues.

But who’s to say that 2016 will not buck the trend, as it has in so many other ways?

We are potentially only one Paris-style terrorist attack or a brazenly aggressive act by Russian President Putin from changing the mood and focus of the American...

Read more: Does it matter who wins the election when it comes to the Middle East?

Will the next U.S. president close the digital divide for Americans without broadband access?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIf they build it, will you come?Doc Searls, CC BY

Most of the 2016 presidential candidates' policy platforms recognize the strategic importance of high-speed Internet (HSI), or broadband, in transforming the economy and spurring innovation.

The candidates appear motivated by a shared belief that high-speed Internet and HSI-enabled digital...

Read more: Will the next U.S. president close the digital divide for Americans without broadband access?

More Articles ...

  1. Will Republican tax plans make America great again?
  2. Online ads know who you are, but can they change you too?
  3. Do school vouchers improve results? It depends on what we ask
  4. Voters who oppose politicians are the most active
  5. Super Tuesday sees Trump and Clinton triumph: scholars around the globe react
  6. Super Tuesday sets the stage for a Trump versus Clinton showdown
  7. Are 'extremist' candidates electable?
  8. Psychological tips for resisting the Internet's grip
  9. Why kids are key to unlocking the potential of 3D printing
  10. Here's how the method of testing can change student scores
  11. Is lead in water a problem beyond Flint? We don't do the testing to find out
  12. Candidates' plans to change controversial H-1B guestworker program highlight need for an overhaul
  13. Elizabeth Warren is savvy not to endorse Clinton or Sanders
  14. What Berkeley's budget cuts tell us about America's public universities
  15. How women change outcomes in courtrooms and beyond
  16. How not to wind up voting for a president you don't actually agree with
  17. We helped uncover a public health crisis in Flint, but learned there are costs to doing good science
  18. Oscars 2016: expert reaction
  19. African-American women could be decisive on Super Tuesday
  20. Apple versus FBI: All Writs Act's age should not bar its use
  21. Subprime gets bad rap in 'Big Short' but is key to easing housing affordability crisis
  22. Want the economy to grow? It's time to look at cities and efficiency
  23. Filling the Supreme Court vacancy: lessons from 1968
  24. Beyond invisibility: engineering light with metamaterials
  25. Three important quotes from the GOP debate, explained
  26. Why Bernie will burn out in Dixie
  27. In FBI versus Apple, government strengthened tech's hand on privacy
  28. Leap day: fixing the faults in our stars
  29. Subprime gets bad rap in 'Big Short' but is key to easing affordability crisis
  30. Why boys need to have conversations about emotional intimacy in classrooms
  31. The surprising link between postwar suburban development and today's inner-city lead poisoning
  32. Clinical trials for childhood cancer drugs are critical, but parents don't always understand what they are signing up for
  33. Why it's time to end in-person voting for good
  34. The mysterious biomechanics of riding – and balancing – a bicycle
  35. Trump's winning streak reveals bigotry's appeal in GOP
  36. Evolution of moral outrage: I'll punish your bad behavior to make me look good
  37. How driverless vehicles will redefine mobility and change car culture
  38. Cyberwar is here to stay
  39. Passwords, privacy and protection: can Apple meet FBI's demand without creating a 'backdoor'?
  40. Five years after the Arab Spring, how does the Middle East use social media?
  41. Former clerk on Justice Antonin Scalia and his impact on the Supreme Court
  42. How should we measure the size of a university's endowment?
  43. How digital technology spawned retro's revival
  44. Clean energy could save hundreds of billions in health costs every year
  45. Has World War Three begun?
  46. How do we know the Zika virus will cost the world $3.5 billion?
  47. Zika: _Aedes aegypti_ mosquitoes love biting humans, and that's why they spread viruses so well
  48. Hospitals rationing drugs behind closed doors: a civil rights issue
  49. To meet the Paris climate goals, do we need to engineer the climate?
  50. A beginner's guide to sex differences in the brain