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Hitler at home: how the Nazi PR machine remade the Führer's domestic image and duped the world

  • Written by The Conversation
imageWalter Frentz photographed Adolf Hitler strolling with German diplomat Walther Hewel in the Berchtesgaden Alps, near the dictator’s mountain home.ww2gallery/flickr, CC BY-NC

On March 16, 1941 – with European cities ablaze and Jews being herded into ghettos – The New York Times Magazine featured an illustrated story on Adolf...

Read more: Hitler at home: how the Nazi PR machine remade the Führer's domestic image and duped the world

Is the changing definition of autism narrowing what we think of as 'normal'?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageIs normal behavior being pathologized?Elizabeth Albert/Flickr, CC BY

I first learned about autism in 1997 in my high school psychology course. It was relegated to a small paragraph in a chapter on childhood disorders. The film Rainman had come out a decade earlier, publicizing the condition to a degree. But autism still wasn’t well-known...

Read more: Is the changing definition of autism narrowing what we think of as 'normal'?

How low-tech farming innovations can make African farmers climate-resilient

  • Written by The Conversation
imageCommunity education is a vital part of the Malawi Farmer to Farmer Agroecology project.Carmen Bezner Kerr, Author provided

Scientists, politicians and the Pope are not the only ones calling for action on climate change these days. Farmers are observing changes in rainfall, temperature and other patterns in weather that have spurred them into...

Read more: How low-tech farming innovations can make African farmers climate-resilient

Sustainability science is a new academic discipline. But is it sustainable?

  • Written by The Conversation
imageScience in isolation cannot provide solutions to world's complex problem.NOTICELJ’S PHOTOSTREAM, CC BY-SA

In 2007, the American Association for the Advancement of Science counted 32 sustainability science programs at colleges and universities in the United States. Today, there are 118.

Universities across the country are increasingly buying...

Read more: Sustainability science is a new academic discipline. But is it sustainable?

Why the US has little to fear from Chinese leaders meeting with tech titans

  • Written by The Conversation
imageReports suggest President Xi will meet with US tech leaders this week. Will that overshadow his meeting with President Obama?Reuters

Later this week, President Xi Jinping will pay his first state visit to the US. Shortly before the visit, Chinese leaders will meet with US tech executives in a high-profile industry forum at the Microsoft campus in...

Read more: Why the US has little to fear from Chinese leaders meeting with tech titans

Vaccines back in the headlines – here's what the experts say

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageA woman receives an MMR injection.Rebecca Naden/Reuters

September 16th’s Republican debate put vaccines back in the headlines, when Ben Carson, a former neurosurgeon, was asked to comment on Donald Trump’s statements linking vaccinations to autism. Carson said:

We have extremely well-documented proof that there...

Read more: Vaccines back in the headlines – here's what the experts say

Here's the score for Obama's college scorecard: more minuses than pluses

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageHow far can Obama's College Scorecard fix college affordability issues?Michael Fleshman, CC BY-NC-SA

This past Saturday, September 12, following an announcement in President Obama’s weekly address, the US Department of Education released its College Scorecard.

The president claimed additional information in the...

Read more: Here's the score for Obama's college scorecard: more minuses than pluses

More Articles ...

  1. Do you need a book to sit in the Oval Office?
  2. Europe's refugee crisis: the last time round it was much, much worse
  3. Scientists at work: space balloons and charged particles above the Arctic Circle
  4. The Conversation US is growing
  5. The Federal Reserve is losing credibility by not raising rates now
  6. Dinnertime storytelling makes kids voracious readers
  7. It's time for doctors to hang up the white coats for good
  8. What's a politician's best tool? A razor
  9. Want more girls to be interested in computer science? Change some classroom stereotypes
  10. Native shrubs: a simple fix for drought-stricken crops in Sub-Saharan Africa
  11. Three women scholars grade Carly Fiorina's performance at the GOP debate
  12. Why the Fed is no longer center of the financial universe
  13. Thank an aging audience for Facebook's proposed dislike button
  14. Capitalism must evolve to solve the climate crisis
  15. When Greenpeace hires journalists, it's a double-edged sword
  16. The key to your health could be in your ZIP code
  17. Does bioenergy have a green energy future in the US?
  18. Why storytelling skills matter for African-American kids
  19. Myth of the 'Missing Link' in evolution does science no favors
  20. Malaysians worldwide demand prime minister's resignation
  21. The tale of Uber and a 19th century French economist
  22. Why Pope Francis' US visit is making the GOP squirm
  23. Can we tie unisex fashion trends to gender equality?
  24. Explainer: why stocks fall when the Fed considers raising interest rates
  25. The 2015 Sierra Nevada snowpack is a 500-year record low
  26. Why more grandparents are raising their grandchildren
  27. Can Iran's rulers still use enemies abroad to rally nation?
  28. If Goldwater can win the GOP nomination, why not Trump?
  29. How advertising research explains Donald Trump's profound appeal
  30. Stem cells could help mend a broken heart, but they've got to mature
  31. Local fishing rights + marine reserves: a better approach to small-scale fisheries recovery
  32. Should the Fed raise rates? Wrong question – here's the right one
  33. It's true. It matters when professors know their students' names
  34. If we burned all fossil fuels, would any of Antartica's ice survive?
  35. Our prosperity is in peril unless we shift from a wasteful world to a 'circular economy'
  36. Fourteen years after 9/11, Obama still struggles to close Guantanamo Bay
  37. Inside academia: black professors are expected to 'entertain' while presenting
  38. Why aren't under-65s diagnosed with cancer until the disease is advanced?
  39. In today's NFL, forget Super Bowl dreams – it's all about fantasy
  40. El Niño – what it will bring this year and how it could change with global warming
  41. Real crisis in psychology isn't that studies don't replicate, but that we usually don't even try
  42. Explainer: is it really OK to eat food that's fallen on the floor?
  43. Oliver Sacks, the brain and God
  44. More Syrian refugees: good for national security
  45. From Jimmy Carter to Donald Trump in four short decades
  46. Why dress and appearance matter at black colleges
  47. Stephen Colbert's Late Show feasts on political fare
  48. The Common Core is today's New Math – which is actually a good thing
  49. When it comes to academic quality, Europeans show the way
  50. To see why attitudes on having children have changed, look at...New Yorker cartoons?