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The Conversation

Guatemala's next president has few plans for fixing rampant corruption, crime and injustice

  • Written by Naomi Roht-Arriaza, Distinguished Professor of Law, University of California, Hastings
Alejandro Giammattei is a former prison official whose tenure was tainted by the 2006 mass killing of seven prisoners. He was accused but never indicted on conspiracy charges in those deaths.AP Photo/ Santiago Billy

Guatemala’s next leader will be Alejandro Giammattei, a right-wing former national prison director.

With 58% of votes,...

Read more: Guatemala's next president has few plans for fixing rampant corruption, crime and injustice

I'm one of hundreds of archaeologists exiled from Syria who's mourning what the war is costing us

  • Written by Lubna Omar, Visiting Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Binghamton University, State University of New York

I used to be a Near Eastern archaeologist working in Syria. Nowadays, I am stuck in academic purgatory, observing from a great distance as the country burns, unable to help protect its history or its present.

Syria sits within what’s known as the cradle of civilization. It’s part of the area archaeologists call the Fertile Crescent that...

Read more: I'm one of hundreds of archaeologists exiled from Syria who's mourning what the war is costing us

A neuroscience-based action plan to deal with stress after El Paso and Dayton shootings

  • Written by Laurel Mellin, Associate Clinical Professor of Family & Community Medicine and Pediatrics, University of California, San Francisco
The tragedies in El Paso and Dayton bring sadness, grief and stress to many people. Ash T Productions/Shutterstock.com

After the mass murders in El Paso and Dayton, discussions about improving mental health and strengthening gun control laws may be comforting.

Neither affords a plan, however, to address the stress that comes with these events to the...

Read more: A neuroscience-based action plan to deal with stress after El Paso and Dayton shootings

Making money off of politics isn't new – it was business as usual in the Gilded Age

  • Written by Jeff Broxmeyer, Assistant Professor of Political Science and Public Administration, University of Toledo
The Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C., whose profits go to the president and his family business.AP/Alex Brandon

When the political leader “Boss” Tweed was arrested in New York on corruption charges in the fall of 1871, among his many assets was a luxury hotel.

Located up the road from City Hall, the Metropolitan was a...

Read more: Making money off of politics isn't new – it was business as usual in the Gilded Age

The journalist who exposed the Jeffrey Epsteins of Victorian London

  • Written by LeeAnne M. Richardson, Associate Professor of English, Georgia State University
W.T. Stead's series of articles detailing a sordid sex ring rocked London.W.T. Stead Resource Site, CC BY-SA

Wealthy men soliciting underage girls for sex. Girls lured to expensive homes by promises of good-paying jobs. Captains of commerce and heads of state reveling in debauchery. Officials looking the other way.

A newspaper exposé written...

Read more: The journalist who exposed the Jeffrey Epsteins of Victorian London

New climate change report underscores the need to manage land for the short and long term

  • Written by Chris E. Forest, Professor of Climate Dynamics, Pennsylvania State University
Undeveloped regions such as the Amazon rainforest are critical resources for slowing climate change.lubasi/Wikimedia, CC BY-SA

In its latest report, the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change describes how agriculture, deforestation, and other human activities have altered 70% of the land on Earth’s surface.

These changes are significantly...

Read more: New climate change report underscores the need to manage land for the short and long term

Why the 2020 census matters for rural Americans

  • Written by John J. Green, Professor of Sociology, University of Mississippi
Families in rural areas are harder for the Census Bureau to reach.Rafa artphoto/Shutterstock.com

As director of the University of Mississippi Center for Population Studies, I regularly talk to people about how they can use data to help their communities thrive.

The decennial census is particularly important – and the next one is less than a...

Read more: Why the 2020 census matters for rural Americans

Talking about Charlottesville with alt-right students

  • Written by Jennifer Rich, Assistant Professor; Director, Rowan Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Rowan University

Pivotal. A turning point. A venue for strong ideas.

These are some of the terms that college students used to describe the 2017 white nationalist rally in Charlottesville, Virginia that claimed the life of Heather Heyer, a counter-protester who died when a man drove his car into a crowd.

Some students, who used these terms during interviews I...

Read more: Talking about Charlottesville with alt-right students

Remote control for brain cells: scientists use ultrasound waves to activate neurons

  • Written by Sreekanth Chalasani, Associate Professor of Molecular Neurobiology (Salk Institute) and Assistant Adjunct Professor of Neurobiology, University of California San Diego
Sound waves are displayed as an oscillating glow light.natrot/Shutterstock.com

What if you didn’t need surgery to implant a pacemaker on a faulty heart? What if you could control your blood sugar levels without an injection of insulin, or mitigate the onset of a seizure without even pushing a button?

I and a team of scientists in my laboratory...

Read more: Remote control for brain cells: scientists use ultrasound waves to activate neurons

The new field of sonogenetics uses sound waves to control the behavior of brain cells

  • Written by Sreekanth Chalasani, Associate Professor of Molecular Neurobiology (Salk Institute) and Assistant Adjunct Professor of Neurobiology, University of California San Diego
Sound waves are displayed as an oscillating glow light.natrot/Shutterstock.com

What if you didn’t need surgery to implant a pacemaker on a faulty heart? What if you could control your blood sugar levels without an injection of insulin, or mitigate the onset of a seizure without even pushing a button?

I and a team of scientists in my laboratory...

Read more: The new field of sonogenetics uses sound waves to control the behavior of brain cells

More Articles ...

  1. Companies promoting causes can be accused of 'wokewashing' – allying themselves only for good PR
  2. Curious Kids: Is homework worthwhile?
  3. Saudi women are fighting for their freedom – and their hard-won victories are growing
  4. Americans’ support for immigration is at record highs – but the government is out of sync with their views
  5. Can experts determine who might be a mass killer? 3 questions answered
  6. I traveled to American Samoa 5 times to study the secret to its football success
  7. 5 tips for parents to build communication skills with children with autism spectrum disorder
  8. NASCAR may be the fastest way to learn about physics
  9. Trump's fight to count US citizens and non-citizens: 5 questions answered
  10. Gender equality at home takes a hit when children arrive
  11. Climate change will mean more multiyear snow droughts in the West
  12. 5 reasons why Trump's Venezuela embargo won't end the Maduro regime
  13. A tick detective wants to understand what drives tick abundance
  14. What 1860 and 1968 can teach America about the 2020 presidential election
  15. French cannabis legalization debate ignores race, religion and the mass incarceration of Muslims
  16. Mass shootings aren't growing more common – and evidence contradicts common stereotypes about the killers
  17. Blood tests for Alzheimer’s: Two experts on why new studies are encouraging
  18. The US-China trade war: 5 essential reads
  19. How to grow human mini-livers in the lab to help solve liver disease
  20. Drilling deeper wells is a band-aid solution to US groundwater woes
  21. Everything in Mecca gets 5 stars — and online reviews of other holy sites are wildly inflated, too
  22. The facts on the US children and teens killed by firearms
  23. The 'warspeak' permeating everyday language puts us all in the trenches
  24. Guns and mental illness: A psychiatrist explains the complexities
  25. From across the globe to El Paso, changes in the language of the far-right explain its current violence
  26. Space travel might fry your brain, causing permanent learning and memory problems
  27. Astronauts' brains are subject to long-lasting damage due to low dose space radiation
  28. Police are more likely to kill men and women of color
  29. Stop blaming video games for mass killings
  30. How the University of Alaska – and other public U.S. universities – now struggle for funding
  31. This tax credit wasn't meant to help with housing, but that's exactly what it's doing
  32. Will Trump’s trade war with China ever end?
  33. Human breast milk may help babies tell time via circadian signals from mom
  34. Why do so many working class Americans feel politics is pointless?
  35. Understanding Christians' climate views can lead to better conversations about the environment
  36. Boost in high school students taking advanced computer science could change the face of tech
  37. Could a national buyback program reduce gun violence in America?
  38. Could a national gun buyback program reduce the 393 million guns on America's streets?
  39. Scammers don't cheat because they need the money — they cheat because they're cheaters
  40. Puerto Ricans unite against Rosselló – and more than a decade of cultural trauma
  41. There's a dark political history to language that strips people of their dignity
  42. The White House is upending decades of protocol for policy-making
  43. An ambitious plan to stop the rise of superbugs
  44. Are shared e-scooters good for the planet? Only if they replace car trips
  45. Grudges come naturally to kids – gratitude must be taught
  46. As Herman Melville turns 200, his works have never been more relevant
  47. Why science needs the humanities to solve climate change
  48. The Muslim Hajj: A spiritual pilgrimage with political overtones
  49. Why isn't Stacey Abrams running? Because African Americans lose to incumbent governors and senators
  50. Why the 'brain-eating' amoeba found in freshwater lakes – while rare – is so deadly