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The Conversation

US refugee policy for white South Africans is part of a century-long effort to keep some English-speaking nations white

  • Written by John Broich, Associate Professor of History, Case Western Reserve University
imageNewly arrived South Africans listen to U.S. Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau deliver welcome statements in a hangar near Washington Dulles International Airport on May 12, 2025. Chip Somodevilla/Getty Images

Whiteness appears to be an official immigration credential in the eyes of the United States government.

The Trump administration...

Read more: US refugee policy for white South Africans is part of a century-long effort to keep some...

AI is reengineering drug discovery by speeding up testing and scanning petabytes of data for connections between diseases

  • Written by Jeffrey Skolnick, Regents' Professor; Mary and Maisie Gibson Chair & GRA Eminent Scholar in Computational Systems Biology, Georgia Institute of Technology

In December, The Conversation hosted a webinar on AI’s revolutionary role in drug discovery and development.

Science and technology editor Eric Smalley interviewed Jeffrey Skolnick, eminent scholar in computational systems biology at Georgia Institute of Technology, and Benjamin P. Brown, assistant professor of pharmacology at Vanderbilt...

Read more: AI is reengineering drug discovery by speeding up testing and scanning petabytes of data for...

Massive eye drop recall reflects ongoing issues with manufacturing and FDA inspection

  • Written by C. Michael White, Distinguished Professor of Pharmacy Practice, University of Connecticut
imageUsing nonsterile eye drops can cause severe eye infections.Lindsey Nicholson/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images

A California company has recalled more than 3.1 million bottles of lubricating eye drops because it had not properly tested – and thus could not prove – whether the products were sterile.

These products are sold under...

Read more: Massive eye drop recall reflects ongoing issues with manufacturing and FDA inspection

How does spider venom damage human cells? Researchers uncover the killer mechanism of recluse spider toxin

  • Written by Matthew Cordes, Associate Professor of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Arizona
imageWhile rarely aggressive, the brown recluse is known for the damage its venom can inflict on people.Lisa Zins/Flickr, CC BY-SA

Spiders are among Earth’s most resourceful predators, nabbing prey by any means necessary. Orb weaversspin webs for capture. Wolf spiders ambush on the ground at night. Almost all spiders use venom when they hunt.

But...

Read more: How does spider venom damage human cells? Researchers uncover the killer mechanism of recluse...

Hormuz closure threatens the global food supply – why grocery price hikes are coming

  • Written by Aya S. Chacar, Professor of International Business, Florida International University
imageFertilizer scarcity and costs are just the beginning of the problems.Jim Watson/AFP via Getty Images

The global energy crisis caused by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz is only the beginning of the economic cost of the war with Iran.

I study how institutions affect businesses and supply chains, and I expect food prices to rise next, with high...

Read more: Hormuz closure threatens the global food supply – why grocery price hikes are coming

Philadelphia’s founding years were rife with conspiracy fears about ‘godless’ Freemasons and the Illuminati

  • Written by Derek Arnold, Instructor in Communication, Villanova University
imageGeorge Washington was initiated into Freemasonry at the age of 20.Strobridge & Co. Lith./Library of Congress via AP

How conspiracies spread has changed immensely over the history of the United States, as technology and media have evolved. But the nature of conspiracies has not.

I teach communications courses at Villanova University, 12 miles...

Read more: Philadelphia’s founding years were rife with conspiracy fears about ‘godless’ Freemasons and the...

What is CREC and how does it shape Pete Hegseth’s religious rhetoric?

  • Written by Samuel Perry, Associate Professor of Rhetoric, Baylor University
imageDefense Secretary Pete Hegseth speaks to members of the media at the Pentagon in Washington D.C. on March 31, 2026. AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth’s conservative evangelical religious beliefs drew attention even before his confirmation hearings in January 2025. He is a member of the Communion of Reformed...

Read more: What is CREC and how does it shape Pete Hegseth’s religious rhetoric?

What I learned from analyzing 789 ‘Shark Tank’ pitches: Narcissists get funding if they’re not arrogant or defensive

  • Written by Paul Sanchez Ruiz, Professor of Management and Entrepreneurship, Iowa State University
imageOn 'Shark Tank,' the 'sharks,' or investors, hear pitches from entrepreneurs to invest in their business. Courtesy of ABC

Entrepreneurs displaying narcissistic behavior are better able to convince investors to give them money when their grandiosity comes across as confidence as opposed to defensiveness or arrogance.

That’s what we learned from...

Read more: What I learned from analyzing 789 ‘Shark Tank’ pitches: Narcissists get funding if they’re not...

About 80% of breast cancer biopsies turn out benign – new imaging tool promises clearer diagnoses and fewer biopsies

  • Written by Quing Zhu, Professor of Engineering, Washington University in St. Louis
imageUltrasound is standard for breast cancer screening, but it has its limitations.Anchiy/E+ via Getty Images

Ultrasound is widely used in breast cancer diagnosis. While it can effectively show that a lump is filled with fluid – indicating it is unlikely to be cancer – it cannot reliably determine whether a solid mass is benign or...

Read more: About 80% of breast cancer biopsies turn out benign – new imaging tool promises clearer diagnoses...

More Articles ...

  1. Teenagers and younger kids are learning coded predator phrases like ‘MAP’ online, long before their parents have even heard of it
  2. What gig workers and employees who get tips need to know about the new no-tax-on-tips tax break
  3. Lebanon’s political elites are using displacement and humanitarian crisis to delay elections again
  4. US and Iran: A brief history of how decades of mistrust and bad blood led to open warfare
  5. What a US attorney general actually does – a law professor spells it out
  6. Toxic dust from California’s shrinking Salton Sea is harming children’s lung growth – our study tracked the impact in 700 kids
  7. The two lives of Chuck Norris
  8. Supreme Court ruling on Colorado conversion therapy case is not a clear win for conservatives
  9. Why the manosphere has an antisemitism problem
  10. Why Americans give: New research finds 5 distinct profiles for generosity
  11. The costume maker who convinced Hersheypark to embrace candy mascots and ‘chocolatize’ their old-timey theme park
  12. Pam Bondi’s extreme political loyalty to Trump wasn’t enough to save her job
  13. Iran’s president appeals to Americans − but does his office still hold any real power?
  14. The nonprofit status of NCAA athletic departments is starting to raise questions
  15. Kratom poisonings surged 1,200% over the past decade, and regulators are struggling to keep up with the dangers
  16. SpaceX and OpenAI IPOs are unlikely to bring skyrocketing returns that Amazon and Apple did, as companies go public later in life and early investors cash out
  17. For adults with ADHD – or even those with just some symptoms – using smart strategies to start and complete tasks can make all the difference
  18. MLB doubles down on gambling with new Polymarket deal
  19. How Iranian hackers pose a threat to US critical infrastructure
  20. Getting $750 a month didn’t end homelessness – but our study shows it still improved the lives of homeless people
  21. Irresponsible parental gun ownership could become a factor in custody disputes
  22. Better urban design could help save Florida’s threatened Big Cypress fox squirrel
  23. Bypass the Strait of Hormuz with nuclear explosives? The US studied that in Panama and Colombia in the 1960s
  24. AI’s fluency in other languages hides a Western worldview that can mislead users − a scholar of Indonesian society explains
  25. 75 years after she led a student strike that helped end school segregation, Barbara Rose Johns now stands in the US Capitol where Robert E. Lee once did
  26. Trump risks falling in to the ‘asymmetric resolve’ trap in Iran − just as presidents before him did elsewhere
  27. Why Iran targeted Amazon data centers and what that does – and doesn’t – change about warfare
  28. The Department of Justice is suing states for sensitive voter data − an election law scholar explains why federal efforts are facing resistance
  29. Why Michael Jackson’s daughter, Paris, won’t stop ‘til she gets enough from his estate
  30. You’re not going to be alone in national parks this summer – enjoy the company
  31. Winter’s alarmingly low snowpack offers a glimpse of the changing rhythm of water in the western US
  32. Federal election observers once played a key role in securing voting rights for all − but times have changed
  33. The NFL draft brings economic gains – and hidden public safety costs
  34. What Detroit can learn from participatory budgeting processes in NYC, Boston and Brazil
  35. Students were skipping my astrophysics class to play video games – so I turned the class itself into a video game
  36. How long young cancer patients survive often depends on the insurance they have
  37. Astronaut Victor Glover is the latest in a long line of Black American explorers − including York, the enslaved man who played a key role in the Lewis and Clark expedition
  38. ‘Project Hail Mary’ demonstrates how intellectual humility can be a guiding force for scientists and astronauts
  39. Holocaust survivors in France came home to stolen apartments, looted furniture and bureaucratic hurdles
  40. How California’s war on smog and its ambitious car pollution rules made everyone’s air cleaner
  41. How polling failures, gambling legalization and political gridlock paved the way for the explosive rise of prediction markets
  42. From youth bulges to graying societies: The demographic dynamics that are upending the world
  43. Trump Fed pick Kevin Warsh could shake up the central bank with his ‘family fight’ model
  44. Ticks are the backyard threat southwestern Pennsylvania homeowners keep ignoring
  45. Benefits of mindfulness meditation go far beyond relaxation – here’s what it is and how to practice it
  46. Artemis II’s long countdown – a space historian explains why it has taken over 50 years to return to the Moon
  47. How sea mines threaten global trade, and how navies detect them
  48. Decades of hostility between Iran and the US were preceded by a little-remembered century-long friendship
  49. NASA wants to build a base on the Moon by the 2030s – how and why it plans to build up to a long-term lunar presence
  50. Basic income’s appeal today is similar to its roots in 18th-century England – it’s a way to compensate people for a common good taken for private gain