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The Conversation

I'm an MLK scholar – and I'll never be able to view King in the same light

  • Written by Jason Miller, Professor of English, North Carolina State University
According to FBI memos, King witnessed and encouraged a rape in a hotel room.AP Photo

David Garrow, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer of Martin Luther King Jr., has unearthed information that may forever change King’s legacy.

In an 8,000-word article published in the British periodical Standpoint Magazine on May 30, Garrow details the...

Read more: I'm an MLK scholar – and I'll never be able to view King in the same light

How soybeans became China's most powerful weapon in Trump's trade war

  • Written by Ian Sheldon, Chair in Agricultural Marketing, Trade and Policy, The Ohio State University

Soybeans may not seem all that useful in a war. Nonetheless they’ve become China’s most important weapon in its ever-worsening trade conflict with the U.S.

China, the world’s biggest buyer of the crop, has reportedly stopped purchasing any American soybeans in retaliation for the Trump administration raising tariffs on US$250...

Read more: How soybeans became China's most powerful weapon in Trump's trade war

Fighting malaria with fungi: biologists engineer a fungus to be deadlier to mosquitoes

  • Written by Antonis Rokas, Cornelius Vanderbilt Chair in Biological Sciences and Professor of Biological Sciences and Biomedical Informatics, Vanderbilt University
Spraying insecticide to kill mosquitoes: Mosquitoes are vectors of many devastating diseases such as malaria.Sukjanya/Shutterstock.com

Bed nets. Insecticides. Sterile and genetically modified insects. Now scientists are adding a genetically engineered toxic fungus to the arsenal of weapons to wipe out mosquitoes that carry the malaria parasite.

Alth...

Read more: Fighting malaria with fungi: biologists engineer a fungus to be deadlier to mosquitoes

Naked mole rat genes could hold the secret to pain relief without opioids

  • Written by Erin Young, Assistant Professor, University of Connecticut School of Nursing; Assistant Director, UCONN Center for Advancement in Managing Pain, University of Connecticut
Naked mole-rats feel no pain when exposed to acid or capsaicin. Roland Gockel, MDC, CC BY-SA

Anyone with an annoying roommate story knows that a difficult living situation can change you in many ways. Now, imagine that instead of just eating all of your food in the refrigerator, that annoying roommate could actually cause genetic changes designed...

Read more: Naked mole rat genes could hold the secret to pain relief without opioids

Ancient DNA is revealing the origins of livestock herding in Africa

  • Written by Mary Prendergast, Professor of Anthropology, Saint Louis University – Madrid
Livestock, like these goats in the Rift Valley of Tanzania, are critical to household economies in East Africa.Katherine Grillo, CC BY-ND

Visitors to East Africa are often amazed by massive herds of cattle with a gorgeous array of horn, hump and coat patterns. Pastoralism – a way of life centered around herding – is a central part of...

Read more: Ancient DNA is revealing the origins of livestock herding in Africa

Who are the 1 in 4 American women who choose abortion?

  • Written by Luu D. Ireland, Assistant Professor of Obstetrics and Gynecology, University of Massachusetts Medical School
A Planned Parenthood in St. Paul, Minnesota.Ken Wolter/shutterstock.com

The abortion debate is at the center of U.S. political dialogue. Voices from both sides flood social media feeds, newspapers, radio and television programs.

In the last year, attacks on reproductive rights sharply increased. In 2019, Georgia, Missouri, Ohio, Kentucky and...

Read more: Who are the 1 in 4 American women who choose abortion?

Why thousands are getting hit with unexpected medical bills

  • Written by Simon F. Haeder, Assistant Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
Surprise medical bills are happening more frequently, often from an ER visit.Damir Khabirov/Shutterstock.com

Hardly a week goes by without another story in the media covering a family somewhere in America dealing with an outrageous medical bill. Yet, in more and more cases, these families don’t have junk insurance, or lack coverage...

Read more: Why thousands are getting hit with unexpected medical bills

Sharing profits and ownership with workers not only make them happier, it benefits the bottom line too

  • Written by Joseph Blasi, Director of the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing, Rutgers University
There's plenty to go around.Papamoon/Shutterstock.com

Near-record low unemploymenthas companies fumbling to find the best ways to recruit and retain workers. Our research suggests a sure-fire way to do just that: give them a real stake.

By that we simply mean sharing some of the profits and even ownership with the men and women who are fundamental...

Read more: Sharing profits and ownership with workers not only make them happier, it benefits the bottom line...

I was an expert witness against a teacher who taught students to question the Holocaust

  • Written by Jennifer Rich, Assistant Professor; Director, Rowan Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Rowan University
Adolf Hitler (second from the right in front) is shown in this 1939 file photo along with German and Italian army chiefs after having signed the German-Italian military pact in Germany.AP

When I first set out to research how the Holocaust was being depicted in textbooks in New Jersey’s public schools, my hope was to see what students were...

Read more: I was an expert witness against a teacher who taught students to question the Holocaust

Why fewer and fewer Americans are getting divorced

  • Written by Tera R. Jordan, Associate Professor of Human Development and Family Studies, Iowa State University
More Americans are sticking to their wedding vows.Melinda Nagy/shutterstock.com

Fewer and fewer Americans are getting divorced, with the rates falling 18% between 2008 and 2016.

Among American adults, there is support for divorce when couples do not get along. Women, people from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups, and adults who have...

Read more: Why fewer and fewer Americans are getting divorced

More Articles ...

  1. Journalist killings, arrests and assaults climb worldwide as authoritarianism spreads
  2. The case against voting for charisma
  3. Israel's political stalemate reveals the power of ultra-Orthodox Jews
  4. What Israel's new election reveals about the struggle over Jewishness
  5. The US drinking water supply is mostly safe, but that's not good enough
  6. A radical idea to get a high-renewable electric grid: Build way more solar and wind than needed
  7. This year the flu came in two waves – here’s why
  8. We're in a golden age of black horror films
  9. Congressional action on Yemen may be the first salvo against presidential war powers
  10. Gene-edited babies don't grow in test tubes -- mothers' roles shouldn't be erased
  11. Gene-edited babies don't grow in test tubes — mothers' roles shouldn't be erased
  12. Gene-edited babies don't grow in test tubes – mothers' roles shouldn't be erased
  13. More Americans are suing over gerrymandered state maps – but the Supreme Court is not likely to step in
  14. 6 ways to protect your mental health from social media's dangers
  15. How to teach and parent better in the age of big data
  16. CBD: The next weapon in the war against opioid addiction?
  17. High-tech fishing gear could help save critically endangered right whales
  18. Sanders and AOC want to cap interest rates on consumer loans at 15% – here's why that's a bad idea
  19. India's Prime Minister Modi pursues politics of Hindu nationalism – what does that mean?
  20. Trump and the problem with pardons
  21. How the new 'Aladdin' stacks up against a century of Hollywood stereotyping
  22. Assange’s new indictment: Espionage and the First Amendment
  23. Rapid water quality tests better protect beachgoers
  24. Doping soldiers so they fight better – is it ethical?
  25. Water stays in the pipes longer in shrinking cities – a challenge for public health
  26. 'World Heritage' site selection is Eurocentric – and that shapes which historic places get love and money
  27. People with traumatic brain injury, who often lose empathy, can regain it with treatment
  28. Mathematics of scale: Big, small and everything in between
  29. As Airbnb grows, this is exactly how much it's bringing down hotel prices and occupancy
  30. The history of China's Muslims and what's behind their persecution
  31. Facebook doesn't fool me – but I worry about how it affects you
  32. Recent attempts at reparations show that World War II is not over
  33. Chicago's Urban Prep Academy – known for 100% college acceptance rates – put reputation ahead of results
  34. US is already fighting a conflict with Iran – an economic war that is hurting the wrong people
  35. Could a lack of humility be at the root of what ails America?
  36. The Constitution dictates that impeachment must not be partisan
  37. The American GI in WWII, uncensored
  38. I'm an evolutionary biologist – here's why this ancient fungal fossil discovery is so revealing
  39. Genetic trigger discovered for common heart problem, mitral valve prolapse
  40. The Catholic Church is tightening rules on reporting sexual abuse – but not swearing off its legal privilege to keep secrets
  41. What’s wrong with those anti-vaxxers? They're just like the rest of us
  42. How rural areas like Florida's Panhandle can become more hurricane-ready
  43. The SAT's new 'adversity score' is a poor fix for a problematic test
  44. How dogs help keep multiracial neighborhoods socially segregated
  45. What China wants: 3 things motivating China's position in trade negotiations with the US
  46. An outlaw yeast thrives with genetic chaos – and could provide clues for understanding cancer growth
  47. Hate heaped on black heroines of the French Resistance would look familiar to AOC and Rashida Tlaib
  48. Simply elegant, Morse code marks 175 years and counting
  49. Getting ready for hurricane season: 4 essential reads
  50. Women take a hit for reporting sexual harassment, but #MeToo may be changing that