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President Trump’s tug-of-war with the courts, explained

  • Written by Paul M. Collins Jr., Professor of Legal Studies and Political Science, UMass Amherst
imageThe U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C.Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg

The Supreme Court handed President Donald Trump a big win on June 27, 2025, by limiting the ability of judges to block Trump administration policies across the nation.

But Trump has not fared nearly as well in the lower courts, where he has lost a series of cases through different...

Read more: President Trump’s tug-of-war with the courts, explained

Your data privacy is slipping away – here’s why, and what you can do about it

  • Written by Mike Chapple, Teaching Professor of IT, Analytics, and Operations, University of Notre Dame

Cybersecurity and data privacy are constantly in the news. Governments are passing new cybersecurity laws. Companies are investing in cybersecurity controls such as firewalls, encryption and awareness training at record levels.

And yet, people are losing ground on data privacy.

In 2024, the Identity Theft Resource Center reported that companies...

Read more: Your data privacy is slipping away – here’s why, and what you can do about it

Higher ed’s relationship with marriage? It’s complicated – and depends on age

  • Written by John V. Winters, Professor of Economics, Iowa State University
imageEducation rates are rising; marriage rates are falling. But the relationship between those two trends isn't straightforward.Ugur Karakoc/E+ via Getty Images

The longer someone stays in school, the more likely they are to delay getting married – but education does not reduce the overall likelihood of being married later in life, according to...

Read more: Higher ed’s relationship with marriage? It’s complicated – and depends on age

Turbulent research landscape imperils US brain gain − and ultimately American prosperity

  • Written by Marc Zimmer, Professor of Chemistry, Connecticut College

Misinformation lends itself to social contagion – here’s how to recognize and combat it

  • Written by Shaon Lahiri, Assistant Professor of Public Health, College of Charleston
imageMisinformation on social media has the potential to manipulate millions of people.Pict Rider/iStock via Getty Images Plus

In 2019, a rare and shocking event in the Malaysian peninsula town of Ketereh grabbed international headlines. Nearly 40 girls age 12 to 18 from a religious school had been screaming inconsolably, claiming to have seen a...

Read more: Misinformation lends itself to social contagion – here’s how to recognize and combat it

Social media can support or undermine democracy – it comes down to how it’s designed

  • Written by Lisa Schirch, Professor of the Practice of Peace Studies, University of Notre Dame
imageA protester calls out Facebook for facilitating the spread of disinformation. AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

Every design choice that social media platforms make nudges users toward certain actions, values and emotional states.

It is a design choice to offer a news feed that combines verified news sources with conspiracy blogs – interspersed with photos...

Read more: Social media can support or undermine democracy – it comes down to how it’s designed

Nations are increasingly ‘playing the field’ when it comes to US and China – a new book explains explains why ‘active nonalignment’ is on the march

  • Written by Jorge Heine, Outgoing Interim Director of the Frederick S. Pardee Center for the Study of the Longer-Range Future, Boston University
imageBrazil President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, center, flanked by India Prime Minister Narendra Modi, left, and South Africa President Cyril Ramaphosa, speaks at the summit of Group of 20 leading economies in Rio de Janeiro on Nov. 19, 2024.Mauro Pimentel/AFP via Getty Images

In 2020, as Latin American countries were contending with the triple...

Read more: Nations are increasingly ‘playing the field’ when it comes to US and China – a new book explains...

Thailand’s judiciary is flexing its muscles, but away from PM’s plight, dozens of activists are at the mercy of capricious courts

  • Written by Tyrell Haberkorn, Professor of Southeast Asian Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageThai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra is swarmed by members of the media after a cabinet meeting at Government House on July 1, 2025.Anusak Laowilas/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Thai Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra is currently feeling the sharp end of the country’s powerful judiciary.

On July 2, 2025, Thailand’s Constitutional...

Read more: Thailand’s judiciary is flexing its muscles, but away from PM’s plight, dozens of activists are at...

From Seattle to Atlanta, new social housing programs seek to make homes permanently affordable for a range of incomes

  • Written by Susanne Schindler, Research Fellow at the Joint Center for Housing Studies, Harvard Kennedy School
imageActivists in Seattle gather signatures to put a social housing initiative on the ballot. In early 2025, voters passed the measure, which implements a payroll tax on high incomes to fund the program.House Our Neighbors, CC BY-SA

Seattle astounded housing advocates around the country in February 2025, when roughly two-thirds of voters approved a...

Read more: From Seattle to Atlanta, new social housing programs seek to make homes permanently affordable for...

Are people at the South Pole upside down?

  • Written by Abigail Bishop, Ph.D. Student in Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageAt the South Pole, which way is up?Abigail Bishop

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com.


Are people on the South Pole walking upside down from the rest of the world? – Ralph P., U.S.


When I was standing at the South Pole, I...

Read more: Are people at the South Pole upside down?

More Articles ...

  1. Rural hospitals will be hit hard by Trump’s signature spending package
  2. ‘Big’ legislative package shifts more of SNAP’s costs to states, saving federal dollars but causing fewer Americans to get help paying for food
  3. Why Texas Hill Country, where a devastating flood killed more than 120 people, is one of the deadliest places in the US for flash flooding
  4. Why Texas Hill Country, where a devastating flood killed dozens, is one of the deadliest places in the US for flash flooding
  5. Conservatives notch 2 victories in their fight to deny Planned Parenthood federal funding through Medicaid
  6. One ‘big, beautiful’ reason why Republicans in Congress just can’t quit Donald Trump
  7. Astronomers have discovered another puzzling interstellar object − this third one is big, bright and fast
  8. War, politics and religion shape wildlife evolution in cities
  9. Military force may have delayed Iran’s nuclear ambitions – but history shows that diplomacy is the more effective nonproliferation strategy
  10. Capitalism and democracy are weakening – reviving the idea of ‘calling’ can help to repair them
  11. What MAGA means to Americans
  12. From glass and steel to rare earth metals, new materials have changed society throughout history
  13. Philadelphians with mental illness want to work, pray, date and socialize just like everyone else – here’s how creating more inclusive communities is good for public health
  14. Speedballing – the deadly mix of stimulants and opioids – requires a new approach to prevention and treatment
  15. Employers are failing to insure the working class – Medicaid cuts would leave them even more vulnerable
  16. Employers are failing to insure the working class – Medicaid cuts will leave them even more vulnerable
  17. Parents who oppose sex education in schools often don’t discuss it at home
  18. Hurricane forecasters are losing 3 key satellites ahead of peak storm season − a meteorologist explains why it matters
  19. The Supreme Court upholds free preventive care, but its future now rests in RFK Jr.’s hands
  20. What damage did the US do to Iran’s nuclear program? Why it’s so hard to know
  21. The rule of law is key to capitalism − eroding it is bad news for American business
  22. Legal wrangling over estate of Jimmy Buffett turns his widow’s huge inheritance into a cautionary tale
  23. AI is advancing even faster than sci-fi visionaries like Neal Stephenson imagined
  24. Despite claims they’d move overseas after the election, most Americans are staying put
  25. Philadelphia’s $2B affordable housing plan relies heavily on municipal bonds, which can come with hidden costs for taxpayers
  26. Humans and animals can both think logically − but testing what kind of logic they’re using is tricky
  27. Mexican flags flown during immigration protests bother white people a lot more than other Americans
  28. Keeping brain-dead pregnant women on life support raises ethical issues that go beyond abortion politics
  29. In LGBTQ+ storybook case, Supreme Court handed a win to parental rights, raising tough questions for educators
  30. Pop, soda or coke? The fizzy history behind America’s favorite linguistic debate
  31. The hidden cost of convenience: How your data pulls in hundreds of billions of dollars for app and social media companies
  32. Why the US bombed a bunch of metal tubes − a nuclear engineer explains the importance of centrifuges to Iranian efforts to build nuclear weapons
  33. Bill Moyers’ journalism strengthened democracy by connecting Americans to ideas and each other, in a long and extraordinary career
  34. Invasive carp threaten the Great Lakes − and reveal a surprising twist in national politics
  35. 1 in 4 Americans reject evolution, a century after the Scopes monkey trial spotlighted the clash between science and religion
  36. Who’s the most American? Psychological studies show that many people are biased and think it’s a white English speaker
  37. Here’s a way to save lives, curb traffic jams and make commutes faster and easier − ban left turns at intersections
  38. Why the traditional college major may be holding students back in a rapidly changing job market
  39. What’s at risk for Arctic wildlife if Trump expands oil drilling in the fragile National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska
  40. 1 in 3 Florida third graders have untreated cavities – how parents can protect their children’s teeth
  41. How can the James Webb Space Telescope see so far?
  42. From the marriage contract to breaking the glass under the chuppah, many Jewish couples adapt their weddings to celebrate gender equality
  43. Universities in every state care for congressional papers that document US political history − federal cuts put their work at risk
  44. Iran emerged weakened and vulnerable after war with Israel − and that could mean trouble for country’s ethnic minorities
  45. Supreme Court upholds childproofing porn sites
  46. What the Supreme Court ruling against ‘universal injunctions’ means for court challenges to presidential actions
  47. Michelin Guide scrutiny could boost Philly tourism, but will it stifle chefs’ freedom to experiment and innovate?
  48. What Trump’s budget proposal says about his environmental values
  49. How Zohran Mamdani’s win in the New York City mayoral primary could ripple across the country
  50. Cyberattacks shake voters’ trust in elections, regardless of party