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The Conversation

Arab Gulf states can outlast low oil prices, but expect foreign policy to shift

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageOil-enriched kingdom: Saudi Arabia's Shaybah oilfield complex at night in the Rub' al-Khali desert.Ali Jarekji/Reuters

What might decreasing oil revenues mean for the Persian Gulf oil states? With low crude prices, high supply and global economic challenges, it is natural to wonder whether the level of dependence on...

Read more: Arab Gulf states can outlast low oil prices, but expect foreign policy to shift

The streak of doubt that underlies ISIS' destructive acts of religious fervor

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageAn image distributed by Islamic State militants purports to show the destruction of a Roman-era temple in Palmyra. REUTERS/Social Media

Slamming sledgehammers. Toppling statues. Decimated artifacts. Detonating charges that flash in an instant, but destroy centuries of history.

The images coming out of Palmyra, Syria,...

Read more: The streak of doubt that underlies ISIS' destructive acts of religious fervor

Disappearing acts: reflecting on New Orleans 10 years after Katrina

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageAn abandoned street in the Lower Ninth Ward in August 2006. . REUTERS/Lee Celano

In this season of anniversaries, no two are more stark in their parallels than Ferguson a year after the shooting of Michael Brown and New Orleans 10 years after Hurricane Katrina killed 1,800 and displaced thousands.

Both involve the...

Read more: Disappearing acts: reflecting on New Orleans 10 years after Katrina

The New Orleans class of 2015: what it tells us and what it doesn't

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageWhere did the children go post-Katrina?Lori Peek, Author provided

Hurricane Katrina led to the largest population displacement in the United States since the Dust Bowl. Over one-third of the 450,000 Louisiana and Mississippi residents displaced from their homes were children.

What happened to these children? Where did they...

Read more: The New Orleans class of 2015: what it tells us and what it doesn't

New Orleans’ recovery is an inspiring and cautionary tale for American cities

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageTen years ago in the Seventh Ward of New Orleans. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

Ten years ago, the nation watched the near-total destruction of New Orleans, one of its most historic cities. New Orleans' lifeblood – its citizens – was pushed out by floodwaters, as its poorest residents clung to the city’s...

Read more: New Orleans’ recovery is an inspiring and cautionary tale for American cities

Lessons for media educators from the Virginia on-air shootings

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageCoverage of slain TV journalists from the station where they worked.WDBJ7

As a professor specializing in broadcast communication, I have tried to find lessons to teach aspiring journalists following the shooting of two TV journalists this week.

When I first heard about the shootings in Virginia of reporter Alison Parker and...

Read more: Lessons for media educators from the Virginia on-air shootings

Does the global stock market sell-off signal the BRIC age is already over?

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageTime to reorder the flags? BRIC flags via www.shutterstock.com

Back in 2001, former Goldman Sachs chief economist Jim O’Neill coined the acronym BRIC to highlight the immense economic potential of the emerging markets of Brazil, Russia, India and China in the decades to come. They would be the economic engines of...

Read more: Does the global stock market sell-off signal the BRIC age is already over?

More Articles ...

  1. We found only one-third of published psychology research is reliable – now what?
  2. Do sex and violence actually sell?
  3. Swept away: Hurricane Katrina and the New Orleans Police Department
  4. Still waiting for help: the lessons of Hurricane Katrina on poverty
  5. Back to school? A crucial time for kids' social and emotional development
  6. Activists misuse open records requests to harass researchers
  7. More audit transparency for investors makes a bitter proposal easier to swallow
  8. Weighing the impact of the Gold King Mine spill – and hundreds of inactive mines like it
  9. The Virginia on-air shootings: all too real
  10. What Don Quixote has to say to Spain about today's immigrant crisis
  11. 'Hamilton': the Broadway hip-hop musical every European leader should see
  12. Setting aside half the Earth for 'rewilding': the ethical dimension
  13. How understanding the prisoner's dilemma can help bridge liberal and conservative differences
  14. Obama, the Iran deal and Rawls' Theory of Justice
  15. Just how big has eSports become?
  16. Campaign of fear: Donald Trump's battle against birthright citizenship
  17. When it comes to New Orleans schools, who is making the choices?
  18. Three reasons why most of us shouldn't worry about the global stock market meltdown
  19. Sins of the Founding Fathers: The perils of judging past heroes by today's standards
  20. It's time for a more nuanced view of childhood poverty
  21. Climate change and Hurricane Katrina: what have we learned?
  22. Clinton's debt-free college comes with a price tag
  23. In the Lower Ninth Ward, a museum works to preserve a culture washed away
  24. Tsipras' second chance: Greece to hold elections
  25. Hillary Clinton's problem: she can't run against Washington
  26. Every song has a color – and an emotion – attached to it
  27. In hospitals, a little bit of rudeness can be a very big deal
  28. For Asian-American students, stereotypes help boost achievement
  29. How much has global warming worsened California's drought? Now we have a number
  30. Talking to Mars: new antenna design could aid interplanetary communication
  31. All is not well in the world of intercollegiate football
  32. Imagining a better outcome for Sandra Bland
  33. Deflategate has never been about footballs---so what, exactly, is the NFL up to?
  34. Elon Musk’s Brave New World: it worked for Henry Ford; why not Tesla?
  35. Who says libraries are dying? They are evolving into spaces for innovation
  36. Turning a page: downsizing the campus book collections
  37. Ray Tensing was trained, equipped much like 32,000 other campus cops
  38. A melting Arctic demands more – not less – research on earth science
  39. Our obsession with hereditary cancers didn't start when we discovered the breast cancer gene
  40. Cynicism about mobile advertising is greatly misplaced
  41. The fate of the metalheads
  42. Hummingbird tongues are tiny pumps that spring open to draw in nectar
  43. In the push for marketable skills, are we forgetting the beauty and poetry of STEM disciplines?
  44. Libraries on the front lines of the homelessness crisis in the United States
  45. Does selling oil from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve make sense now?
  46. Will we pick privacy over drone-drops from Amazon?
  47. How the Federal Reserve keeps the US economy from bonking
  48. Fossils suggest an aquatic plant that bloomed underwater was among first flowering plants
  49. The treatment of Yazidi women highlights a historical issue: what makes someone human?
  50. Why American academics are building ties with Cuba