NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years

  • Written by Andrew J. Hoffman, Holcim (US) Professor at the Ross School of Business and Education Director at the Graham Sustainability Institute, University of Michigan

Climate change did not come up in the first presidential debate – well, not in any real sense. Hillary Clinton jabbed at Donald Trump for claiming that “The concept of global warming was created by and for the Chinese in order to make U.S. manufacturing non-competitive.” He denied that he said it, but his tweet on November 6,...

Read more: Climate change and the presidential race: Lessons from the Reagan years

Underwater robots help scientists see where marine larvae go and how they get there

  • Written by Thomas Wolcott, Professor Emeritus of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, North Carolina State University

Many people who love the oceans never realize that a single drop of seawater is teeming with plankton, which means “drifters” in Greek. These organisms, which typically range in size from a pinhead down to the tip of a pin, spend their lives drifting with currents and form the base of ocean food chains.

Most larger marine organisms,...

Read more: Underwater robots help scientists see where marine larvae go and how they get there

If you want to publish a truly subversive novel, have a main character who's fat

  • Written by Beth Younger, Associate Professor of English & Women's and Gender Studies, Drake University
image'Watercolor' via www.shutterstock.com

Banned Books Week, held this year from Sept. 25 to Oct. 1, is an annual event designed to draw national attention to the harms of censorship. Created in 1982 by the American Library Association in response to a growing number of “challenged” books in schools and libraries, the week is really about...

Read more: If you want to publish a truly subversive novel, have a main character who's fat

Alexander Hamilton and the new Supreme Court term

  • Written by Eric Segall, Kathy & Lawrence Ashe Professor of Law, Georgia State University

As the Supreme Court’s new term begins, many court watchers have observed that the justices don’t have the usual front-page, nationally important cases on their docket.

By this time a year ago, the Supreme Court had already decided to hear controversial affirmative action, free speech and redistricting cases. Soon thereafter the...

Read more: Alexander Hamilton and the new Supreme Court term

Feed a virus but starve bacteria? When you're sick, it may really matter

  • Written by Ruslan Medzhitov, Professor of Immunobiology, Yale University
imageBacteria.From www.shutterstock.com

Think back to the last time you came down with a cold and what it felt like to be sick. For most people, the feeling of sickness is a set of psychological and behavioral changes including fatigue, lethargy, changes in appetite, changes in sleep patterns and a desire to be away from others.

Of course, none of these...

Read more: Feed a virus but starve bacteria? When you're sick, it may really matter

Why America needs the virtues of humility

  • Written by Christopher Beem, Managing Director of the McCourtney Institute of Democracy, Pennsylvania State University

In a recent speech full of allusions to Bible verses and Christian hymns at the National Baptist Convention in Kansas City, Hillary Clinton focused on Christian humility. She acknowledged that

“Humility is not something you hear much about in politics.”

But, she said, it should be. Those who truly understand “the awesomeness of...

Read more: Why America needs the virtues of humility

Group work gets kids more engaged in STEM

  • Written by Allison Master, Research Scientist, University of Washington
imageWhat can be done to get more kids interested in STEM?Child image via www.shutterstock.com

Shortage of science, technology, engineering and math (STEM) professionals has been an important concern in the United States. It is estimated that over the next 10 years, the nation could face a shortage of one million STEM workers.

So, what can we do to get...

Read more: Group work gets kids more engaged in STEM

When did Che Guevara become CEO? The roots of the new corporate activism

  • Written by Jerry Davis, Professor of Management and Sociology, University of Michigan
imageHis example appears to be living on in corporate America these days.Che Guevera via www.shutterstock.com

Target recently staked out a position in the culture wars by announcing that it will build private bathrooms in all its locations, after earlier allowing transgender customers to use whichever room corresponds with their gender identity – b...

Read more: When did Che Guevara become CEO? The roots of the new corporate activism

Four quotes from the first Clinton-Trump debate, explained

  • Written by Chad Williams, Associate Professor of African and Afro-American Studies, Brandeis University

Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump faced off for their first debate at Hofstra University on Sept. 26. We asked a group of scholars to listen to the often heated exchange and react to just one quote related to their area of expertise. Here are those picks.

Emily Blanchard, Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College

“They&rsq...

Read more: Four quotes from the first Clinton-Trump debate, explained

More Articles ...

  1. Will driving your own car become the socially unacceptable public health risk smoking is today?
  2. Addicted to oil: US gasoline consumption is higher than ever
  3. Removing gender bias from algorithms
  4. Why a Zika vaccine is a long way off
  5. Trump, Clinton and the future of global democracy
  6. What's behind America's insistence on instilling grit in kids?
  7. Will Colombia's peace deal get the people's vote?
  8. How the Jim Crow internet is pushing back against Black Lives Matter
  9. Trump and Clinton debate strategies that can make anyone a better public speaker
  10. Five key debate moments that altered the course of a presidential race
  11. Public universities are under threat – not just by outside reformers
  12. Can public transit and ride-share companies get along?
  13. How do antibiotic-resistant bacteria get into the environment?
  14. Is Philippine President Duterte a threat to the peace in Southeast Asia?
  15. Feds: We can read all your email, and you'll never know
  16. The NFL joins the data revolution in sports
  17. Refugees, migration addressed in first-time UN summit: What was accomplished?
  18. Scientist at work: Tracking melt water under the Greenland ice sheet
  19. Here's how to raise a child to be sympathetic
  20. Was the Fed right to delay raising interest rates? Two scholars react
  21. Police shootings and race in America: Five essential reads
  22. How corporate America can curb income inequality and make more money too
  23. Why isn’t science better? Look at career incentives
  24. Harvard study: Policy issues nearly absent in presidential campaign coverage
  25. To curb North Korea's nuclear program, follow the money
  26. How the American online sex trade continues to thrive
  27. How can we get pharma companies to do more for global health? Try ranking them
  28. The rise of a conspiracy candidate
  29. How ZIP codes nearly masked the lead problem in Flint
  30. Why teen brains need later school start time
  31. Memo to next president: Here's how to avoid our history of energy policy mistakes
  32. Psychology expert: Why extremists use violence in their quest for significance
  33. Suffering from Fed rate hike anxiety? You're not the only one
  34. What is terrorism, and is it getting worse?
  35. 'Snowden,' a picture of the cybersecurity state
  36. Taking the GUESSwork out of video game satisfaction
  37. How Congress is failing on Zika
  38. How random is your randomness, and why does it matter?
  39. Should Wells Fargo execs responsible for bilking customers be forced to return their pay?
  40. Black Americans may be more resilient to stress than white Americans
  41. Why the Native American pipeline resistance in North Dakota is about climate justice
  42. As climate change alters the oceans, what will happen to Dungeness crabs?
  43. Clinton and Trump 2016: A battle to win over ambivalent voters
  44. Memetics and the science of going viral
  45. Why do the Paralympics get so little media attention in the United States?
  46. How a volcano in Indonesia led to the creation of Frankenstein
  47. What exactly does 'instantaneous' mean?
  48. Millions rely on cheap cloth masks that may provide little protection against deadly air pollution
  49. What do the Clinton charities actually do and where does their money go?
  50. With 10,000 Syrian refugees resettled in the US, are more on the way?