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What's the real risk from consumer drones this holiday season?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageYay, a holiday drone! What could possibly go wrong?PhOtOnQuAnTiQuE, CC BY-NC-ND

This holiday season, the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) is estimating that over one million small “Unmanned Aerial Systems” (sUAS’s) – drones, to the rest of us – will be sold to consumers. But as hordes of novice pilots take to the...

Read more: What's the real risk from consumer drones this holiday season?

Paris Agreement on climate change: the good, the bad, and the ugly

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
image

At 7:27 pm local time Saturday, December 12th, 2015, a new Paris Agreement on global climate change was born after four years of taxing labor. Its much-anticipated birth was quickly followed by copious self-congratulations by many of the parents in the room who almost all were overcome by joy and bursting with pride.

Praise heaped upon newborns...

Read more: Paris Agreement on climate change: the good, the bad, and the ugly

Promises, promises: how legally durable are Obama's climate pledges?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLocked down? Obama, with Secretary of State John Kerry, committed to further cuts in emissions from the US at Paris climate summit.Kevin Lamarque/Reuters

As part of a global agreement on climate change, the US has pledged, among other things, to reduce its greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions by 26%-28% compared to 2005 levels by the year 2025. But...

Read more: Promises, promises: how legally durable are Obama's climate pledges?

Why today's long STEM postdoc positions are effectively anti-mother

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDoes it need to be so hard to be a mom and a professor?Quinn Dombrowski, CC BY-SA

The fallen leaves remind, once again, that the Hunger Games of securing coveted tenure-track academic jobs have begun. This is my second year serving on the Northwestern University Department of Neurobiology Search Committee, and we’ve received nearly 300...

Read more: Why today's long STEM postdoc positions are effectively anti-mother

Studying gun violence is the only way to figure out how to stop it – but we don't

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA protest outside the National Shooting Sports Foundation in Newtown, Connecticut, March 28 2013. Michelle McLoughlin/Reuters

It seems that not a week passes without a new report of a mass shooting in the United States.

The gun epidemic, long simmering, has in the past few weeks seemed to reach a new phase in the public discourse. The shootings in...

Read more: Studying gun violence is the only way to figure out how to stop it – but we don't

Why Every Student Succeeds Act still leaves most vulnerable kids behind

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat will the new law change?woodleywonderworks, CC BY

For a decade, congressional attempts to revise the embattled 2001 No Child Left Behind Act – a reauthorization of the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) – hit a brick wall.

On December 10 2015, that changed. The Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), passed by the House...

Read more: Why Every Student Succeeds Act still leaves most vulnerable kids behind

Sinatra's films shattered the postwar myth of the white American male

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIn The Man with the Golden Arm, Frank Sinatra plays a poker-dealing junkie.

Frank Sinatra’s 100th birthday on December 12 is being celebrated with all the requisite fanfare: Alex Gibney’s HBO documentary Sinatra: All or Nothing at All, CBS' Sinatra 100 All-Star Grammy Concert, exhibits at the Lincoln Center and Grammy Museum, a London...

Read more: Sinatra's films shattered the postwar myth of the white American male

Scholars: Trump's call to 'ban Muslims' is un-American

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTrump calls for a ban on Muslims entering the US.Randall Hill/Reuters

Q: Presidential candidate Donald Trump called Monday for barring all Muslims from entering the US. He previously called for surveillance against mosques and a database for all Muslims living the US. What can you tell us about the history of attacks against Muslims in the US? Are...

Read more: Scholars: Trump's call to 'ban Muslims' is un-American

Terror attacks in Paris and California expose modern society’s lack of resilience

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageOur response to terrorism.Reuters

The terrorist attacks that occurred in Paris on November 13 shattered the complacency of the French lifestyle. A few weeks later, a savage attack erupted in San Bernardino, California, further exposing the vulnerability of Western societies.

Dealing with terrorism and, in particular, with the frightening emergence...

Read more: Terror attacks in Paris and California expose modern society’s lack of resilience

More Articles ...

  1. Rarity of Jupiter-like planets means planetary systems exactly like ours may be scarce
  2. Why scholars emphasize the need for affirmative action
  3. How the justice system fails us after police shootings
  4. Gun laws are being reformed, just not on Capitol Hill
  5. How a simple observation from the 1800s about patterns in big data sets can fight fraud
  6. What's behind Japan's moss obsession?
  7. Why China and the US have found common purpose on climate change
  8. How do we ensure the next generation of workers isn't worse off than the last?
  9. When is an aspirin a day to prevent heart attacks too risky?
  10. Should voters care about candidates' religious views?
  11. It's time to repeal the gun industry's exceptional legal immunity
  12. How much diversity can the US Constitution stand?
  13. WWII treaty of 'unconditional surrender': a model to enforce climate pledges
  14. Fed interest rate hike may have less of an impact than you think
  15. The life-changing love of one of the 20th century’s greatest physicists
  16. Why Supreme Court case on race in admissions matters more than ever
  17. The ethics of climate change: what we owe people – and the rest of the planet
  18. Scientists tend to superspecialize – but there are ways they can change
  19. Targeting black viewers: what The Wiz Live! tells us about race and TV advertising
  20. Trump is running last in one key race
  21. Obama shows the flaws in America’s efforts to combat ISIS
  22. Do gun purchases go up after mass shootings?
  23. Why treat gene editing differently in two types of human cells?
  24. Wall Street watchdog SEC can't end violence in Congo
  25. National security experts react to President Obama's speech on ISIS
  26. Climate activists take to social media for Paris summit, but who are they reaching?
  27. If you give a man a gun: the evolutionary psychology of mass shootings
  28. How pervasive anti-millennial sentiment has hurt the cause of student protesters
  29. Total recall sounds great, but some things should be forgotten
  30. When fear is a weapon: how terror attacks influence mental health
  31. Here's how screen time is changing the way kids tell stories
  32. Can solar geoengineering be part of responsible climate policy?
  33. Forget about designer babies – gene editing won't work on complex traits like intelligence
  34. To talk or not to talk? The dilemma of suicide contagion
  35. Six things Americans should know about mass shootings
  36. The latest bad news on carbon capture from coal power plants: higher costs
  37. When families move, high school students may suffer
  38. Older adults: an untapped, renewable resource on climate action
  39. Focus on college affordability obscures real problem: we're overeducated
  40. What clues does your dog's spit hold for human mental health?
  41. Students' demand for diverse faculty is a demand for a better education
  42. How HIV became a treatable, chronic disease
  43. Here's why academics should write for the public
  44. The artist's dilemma: what constitutes selling out?
  45. Why corporate sustainability won't solve climate change
  46. Want to do something good for your health? Try being generous
  47. Why Europe will let member states opt out of GM crops
  48. Germany needs to rethink what it means to be German to resolve refugees and ISIS
  49. China's plan to put two-faced citizens on credit blacklist isn't all that foreign
  50. Purging daily demons: what's behind the popularity of exorcisms?