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The Conversation

57 años después del asesinato de Kennedy, las pistas en México se agotan

  • Written by Gonzalo Soltero, Professor of Narrative Analysis, School of Higher Studies, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM)
imageEsta es la supuesta foto de Lee Harvey Oswald que la estación de la CIA en la Ciudad de México envió tras el asesinato de JFK.

La mayoría de las teorías de conspiración que rodean el asesinato del expresidente estadounidense John F. Kennedy han sido refutadas. Kennedy no fue asesinado por un dispositivo de...

Read more: 57 años después del asesinato de Kennedy, las pistas en México se agotan

'Constructive arguing' can help keep the peace at your Thanksgiving table

  • Written by James M. Honeycutt, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Communication Studies from Louisiana State University; Lecturer in Executive Education, University of Texas at Dallas
imageThose with different perspectives don’t have to butt heads.FluxFactory/E+ via Getty Images

Sex, income, religion and politics – these are some of the biggies on the list of taboo topics during polite discussion. Even a conciliatory tone doesn’t always protect you if the subjects are spicy. When singer Katy Perry tweeted...

Read more: 'Constructive arguing' can help keep the peace at your Thanksgiving table

This type of sexual harassment on campus often goes overlooked

  • Written by Sarah Ives, Instructor of Anthropology, City College of San Francisco
imageTeaching assistants often remain silent when sexual harassment comes from the students they teach.Hill Street Studios / Getty Images

When the #MeToo movement gained momentum in 2017, it exposed widespread sexual harassment in the workplace, and academia was no exception. Yet the COVID-19 pandemic has dimmed the spotlight on this issue in higher...

Read more: This type of sexual harassment on campus often goes overlooked

Homeless patients with COVID-19 often go back to life on the streets after hospital care, but there's a better way

  • Written by J. Robin Moon, Adjunct Associate Professor, City University of New York
imageUnion Square in Manhattan, where many of New York City's homeless live. Noam Galai via Getty Images

In 2019, about 567,715 homeless people were living in the United States. While this number had been steadily decreasing since 2007, in the past two years it has started to increase. For New York City, even before COVID-19, 2020 was already turning...

Read more: Homeless patients with COVID-19 often go back to life on the streets after hospital care, but...

Will there be a monument to the COVID-19 pandemic?

  • Written by Emily Godbey, Associate Professor, Art and Visual Culture, Iowa State University

Editor’s Note: Dr. Emily Godbey is a professor of art and visual culture at Iowa State University. In this interview, she discusses how plague monuments were used to commemorate victims of past disease outbreaks, temporary memorials for COVID-19 and why plague memorials are not as prolific as war memorials.

A short history of plague monuments....

Read more: Will there be a monument to the COVID-19 pandemic?

Janet Yellen and Kamala Harris keep shattering glass ceilings – but global elite boys club remains

  • Written by Kevin L. Young, Associate Professor of Economics, University of Massachusetts Amherst
imageYellen with a few of the boys. AP Photo/Annie Rice

Janet Yellen may soon become the first woman to lead the Treasury Department, about six years after shattering another glass ceiling at the top of the Federal Reserve.

She’s not alone in breaking down barriers in President-elect Joe Biden’s proposed new Cabinet. Michele Flournoy is the...

Read more: Janet Yellen and Kamala Harris keep shattering glass ceilings – but global elite boys club remains

Poland's anti-abortion push highlights pandemic risks to democracy

  • Written by Brian Grodsky, Professor of Political Science, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageThe push to tighten Poland's restrictive abortion laws has proved a lightning bolt moment for protesters. Wojtek Raadwanski/AFP via Getty Images

Hundreds of thousands of Poles have taken to the streets since late October, defying bans on mass gatherings and risks from the COVID-19 pandemic to protest the government.

An immediate concern for...

Read more: Poland's anti-abortion push highlights pandemic risks to democracy

California vetoed ethnic studies requirements for public high school students, but the movement grows

  • Written by Wayne Au, Professor of Education, University of Washington, Bothell
imageA mural outside La Chiquita Grocery in Santa Ana, Calif. honors the military service of nearly 200 local Mexican Americans.Allen J. Schaben/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

California Gov. Gavin Newsom surprised many supporters in his state earlier this fall when he vetoed a bill that would have required public high school students to take ethnic...

Read more: California vetoed ethnic studies requirements for public high school students, but the movement...

It's not just ABCs – preschool parents worry their kids are missing out on critical social skills during the pandemic

  • Written by Michele L. Stites, Assistant Professor of Early Childhood Education, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imagePreschool is an opportunity to develop important social skills like taking turns, working in groups and making friends. John Tlumacki/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

As COVID-19 cases once again spike across the country, parents in school districts like New York City and Detroit face another weeks long stretch of remote learning. This often...

Read more: It's not just ABCs – preschool parents worry their kids are missing out on critical social skills...

Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is cheaper than Pfizer's and Moderna's and doesn't require supercold temperature

  • Written by Sanjay Mishra, Project Coordinator & Staff Scientist, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Vanderbilt University
imageNow there is a third possible vaccine for fighting the COVID-19 pandemic.Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images

The biopharmaceutical company AstraZeneca has released data on what is now the third promising vaccine candidate against COVID-19 – and it has several advantages over those of its competitors, Pfizer and Moderna.

On Monday,...

Read more: Oxford-AstraZeneca vaccine is cheaper than Pfizer's and Moderna's and doesn't require supercold...

More Articles ...

  1. Testing sewage can give school districts, campuses and businesses a heads-up on the spread of COVID-19
  2. How Biden and Kerry could rebuild America's global climate leadership
  3. 'My vote will be Black' – A wave of Afro-Brazilian women ran for office in 2020 but found glass ceiling hard to break
  4. School suspensions don't just unfairly penalize Black students – they lead to lower grades and 'Black flight'
  5. Republicans didn't lose big in 2020 – they held onto statehouses and the power to influence future elections
  6. These at-home exercises can help older people boost their immune system and overall health in the age of COVID-19
  7. Coronavirus vaccines: health experts identify ways to build public trust
  8. Why do older people heal more slowly?
  9. A century ago, James Weldon Johnson became the first Black person to head the NAACP
  10. Kids as young as 3 years old think YouTube is better for learning than other types of video
  11. Muslim schools are allies in France's fight against radicalization – not the cause
  12. Muslims have visualized Prophet Muhammad in words and calligraphic art for centuries
  13. How George Washington used his first Thanksgiving as president to unite a new country
  14. In the 1620s, Plymouth Plantation had its own #MeToo moment
  15. Ocho meses de confinamiento por COVID-19 y contando: ¿Qué podemos hacer cuando estamos aburridos?
  16. Why nursing home aides exposed to COVID-19 aren’t taking sick leave
  17. China beat the coronavirus with science and strong public health measures, not just with authoritarianism
  18. A brief history of Georgia's runoff voting – and its racist roots
  19. Why do tigers have stripes?
  20. Laughing is good for your mind and your body – here's what the research shows
  21. The rise and fall of Tab – after surviving the sweetener scares, the iconic diet soda gets canned
  22. Opportunities to practice real-life philanthropy bring academic benefits
  23. Biden's ambitious energy plan faces headwinds, but can move the US forward
  24. How Joe Biden did so well in Georgia
  25. How Biden might stimulate the sputtering US economy: 4 questions answered
  26. Why Trump's election fraud claims aren't showing up in his lawsuits challenging the results
  27. Rural hospitals are under siege from COVID-19 – here's what doctors are facing, in their own words
  28. Keeping indoor air clean can reduce the chance of spreading coronavirus
  29. Amid a raging pandemic, the US faces a nursing shortage. Can we close the gap?
  30. COVID-19 vaccines were developed in record time – but are these game-changers safe?
  31. Five reasons Trump's challenge of the 2020 election will not lead to civil war
  32. Why it's important to see women as capable ... of terrible atrocities
  33. What's cellular about a cellphone?
  34. Returning the 'three sisters' – corn, beans and squash – to Native American farms nourishes people, land and cultures
  35. Trump invitation to Michigan lawmakers could spark state and federal political crisis
  36. While spending holidays at home, here are a dozen more things you can do to help stop COVID-19
  37. As CDC warns against Thanksgiving travel, here are a dozen more things you can do to help stop COVID-19
  38. JFK conspiracy theory is debunked in Mexico 57 years after Kennedy assassination
  39. 4 tips for college students to avoid procrastinating with their online work
  40. Why face masks belong at your holiday gathering – 7 things you need to know about wearing them
  41. Why face masks belong at your Thanksgiving gathering – 7 things you need to know about wearing them
  42. More families are discussing end-of-life planning as COVID-19 cases rise – here's how to start the conversation
  43. College-age kids are drinking less alcohol – but smoking more marijuana
  44. With 250,000 US deaths, COVID-19 is triggering more end-of-life planning – and young people want in on the discussions
  45. College-age kids and teens are drinking less alcohol – but something else is rising
  46. College-age kids and teens are drinking less alcohol – marijuana is a different story
  47. What's the gold standard, and why does the US benefit from a dollar that isn't tied to the value of a glittery hunk of metal?
  48. US colleges report a 43% decline in new international student enrollment, and not just because of the pandemic
  49. 3 reasons for information exhaustion – and what to do about it
  50. Curved origami offers a creative route to making robots and other mechanical devices