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A President Harris might not get any Supreme Court picks – Biden proposes term limits to make sure all future presidents get two

  • Written by Kevin J. McMahon, Professor of Political Science, Trinity College
imagePresident Joseph R. Biden, Jr. and his Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson and Vice President Kamala Harris just before the investiture ceremony for Jackson on September 30, 2022 in Washington, DC. Supreme Court of the United States via Getty Images

To emphasize the importance of an election, presidential candidates often predict that the...

Read more: A President Harris might not get any Supreme Court picks – Biden proposes term limits to make sure...

What is love? A philosopher explains it’s not a choice or a feeling − it’s a practice

  • Written by Edith Gwendolyn Nally, Associate Professor of Philosophy, University of Missouri-Kansas City
imageHow we understand love shapes the trajectory of our relationships. MicroStockHub/iStock via Getty Images Plusimage

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.


How do you define love? Is it a choice or a feeling? – Izzy, age 11, Golden,...

Read more: What is love? A philosopher explains it’s not a choice or a feeling − it’s a practice

5 growing threats to academic freedom

  • Written by Isaac Kamola, Associate Professor of Political Science, Trinity College
imageNew research shows college professors are facing more political pressure to stifle what they want to say.skynesher/E+ via Getty Images

The ability to teach and conduct research free from political interference is the cornerstone of higher education and its contribution to the public good. Academic freedom, however, has become increasingly...

Read more: 5 growing threats to academic freedom

Moms think more about household chores − and this cognitive burden hurts their mental health

  • Written by Darby Saxbe, Professor of Psychology, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imageMoms more often make the list, even when dads help cross things off it.Maskot/DigitalVision via Getty Images

When you think about housework, you likely think of actions: scrubbing the dishes, running errands, chopping vegetables for dinner. And it’s not news to say that mothers often shoulder the burden for most of those activities.

But...

Read more: Moms think more about household chores − and this cognitive burden hurts their mental health

Buddha’s lessons on impermanence are carved into monuments and buildings – this course explores why

  • Written by Mitch Hendrickson, Associate Professor of Archeology, University of Illinois Chicago
image

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.

Title of course:

The Archaeology of Buddhism

What prompted the idea for the course?

I adopted this course from a colleague when I took on my assistant professor position here at University of Illinois, Chicago. Over the years, the...

Read more: Buddha’s lessons on impermanence are carved into monuments and buildings – this course explores why

I studied ShotSpotter in Chicago and Kansas City – here’s what people in Detroit and the more than 167 other cities and towns using this technology should know

  • Written by Eric L. Piza, Professor of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Northeastern University
imageCities and towns across the United States have invested in the gunshot detection technology ShotSpotter.Douglas Sacha/Getty Images, CC BY

Like many large cities in the U.S., Detroit’s gun violence rate has fluctuated since the COVID-19 pandemic and the unrest after the murder of George Floyd in 2020. The city’s murder rate increased...

Read more: I studied ShotSpotter in Chicago and Kansas City – here’s what people in Detroit and the more than...

Xi signals no deviation from course – nor in the driver – despite economic bumps in the road

  • Written by Anthony Saich, Professor of International Affairs, Harvard Kennedy School
imageAll seeing, all powerful, all Xi.Pedro Pardo/AFP via Getty Images)

Chinese President Xi Jinping has laid out his vision for China’s economic and social future – and it places Xi Jinping at the very center.

Having cemented his political legacy at the 20th Chinese Communist Party Congress in October 2022 by being confirmed leader until at...

Read more: Xi signals no deviation from course – nor in the driver – despite economic bumps in the road

Video game performers are becoming Hollywood stars in their own right − and are on strike to be paid and protected accordingly

  • Written by James Dawes, Professor of English, Macalester College
imageA shirt supporting striking video game performers is worn during Comic-Con International on July 26, 2024, in San Diego.Christy Radecic/Invision/AP

Hollywood screenwriters went on strike in May 2023. Two months later, actors joined them on the picket line. Those strikes ended later that year with historic deals that included, for the first time,...

Read more: Video game performers are becoming Hollywood stars in their own right − and are on strike to be...

Hospital-acquired infections are rising – here’s how to protect yourself in health care settings

  • Written by Nasia Safdar, Professor of Infectious Disease, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageWhether a patient or visitor, hand hygiene while at the hospital is critical.Luis Alvarez/Digital Vision via Getty Images

A new study from the National Institutes of Health shows a jump in both hospital-acquired infections and resistance to the antibiotics used to treat them. The findings are based on data gathered at 120 U.S. hospitals from...

Read more: Hospital-acquired infections are rising – here’s how to protect yourself in health care settings

What GoFundMe conceals: The campaigns that fail

  • Written by Martin Lukk, Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology, University of Toronto
imageFaran Kaplan's neighbor set up a GoFundMe page for him that raised over $100,000 after his wife was killed and other relatives injured in an accident. Pete Marovich/The Washington Post via Getty Images

Long before the advent of reality television, the popular game show “Queen for a Day” thrilled American audiences by giving women who...

Read more: What GoFundMe conceals: The campaigns that fail

More Articles ...

  1. Kamala Harris is no Hubert Humphrey − how the presumed 2024 Democratic presidential nominee isn’t like the 1968 party candidate
  2. JD Vance’s selection as Trump’s running mate marks the end of Republican conservatism
  3. Anti-Syrian violence in Turkey complicates normalization process between Turkey and Syria
  4. Vaccines tell a success story that Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Trump forget – here are some key reminders
  5. Real equity in math education is about more than good grades and test scores
  6. Veepstakes have evolved from where you live to who you are − which way will Harris turn to balance the ticket?
  7. Trump’s promotion of an image of strength after assassination attempt borrows from authoritarian playbook
  8. ADHD brains present unique challenges, but the condition is highly treatable − a primary care nurse practitioner with ADHD explains the science
  9. New treatments offer much-needed hope for patients suffering from chronic pain
  10. US citizenship was forced on Native Americans 100 years ago − its promise remains elusive
  11. Tagging seals with sensors helps scientists track ocean currents and a changing climate
  12. Homeless service providers could help more people overcome homelessness if they measured success differently
  13. Happy 50th birthday to the UPC barcode – no one expected you would revolutionize global commerce
  14. Chronic pain: emerging treatment options for patients after the opiod crisis – podcast
  15. Paris Olympics promote sustainability for good reason: Climate change is putting athletes and their sports at risk
  16. Revisiting Middletown, Ohio – the Midwestern town at the heart of JD Vance’s ‘Hillbilly Elegy’
  17. Xylazine wounds are a growing crisis among drug users in Philly − a nurse explains potential causes and proper treatment
  18. Good feedback is an art – here’s how I teach it
  19. What do genes have to do with psychology? They likely influence your behavior more than you realize
  20. Cheesemaking is a complex science – a food chemist explains the process from milk to mozzarella
  21. Arrest student protesters, wait or negotiate? Colleges can use ‘ladder of harm’ to determine appropriate response to Gaza protests on campus
  22. Biden dropped out − is the news media to blame?
  23. Cancer costs for Americans with private health insurance rose after the ACA rollout and fell for those with Medicaid
  24. As Hamas war drags on, Israeli democracy weakens further
  25. Supreme Court ruling may put presidents above the law – but even kings never were
  26. Can a brush with death change politicians? It did for notorious Alabama segregationist George Wallace
  27. Court battle to keep Annunciation House open underscores how faith groups strive to welcome strangers in the face of anti-immigrant sentiment
  28. Lincoln called for divided Americans to heed their ‘better angels,’ and politicians have invoked him ever since in crises − but for Abe, it was more than words
  29. Sure, 2024 has had lots of news – but compared with 1940, 1968 or 1973, it’s nothing exceptional
  30. Retaining flavor while removing caffeine − a chemist explains the chemistry behind decaf coffee
  31. Seafloor sediment reveals previously unknown volcanic eruption 520,000 years ago in south Aegean Sea
  32. Worried about the health effects of the sugar in your breakfast cereal? Little has changed since the days of ‘Unfrosted,’ the Pop-Tarts movie
  33. Counter-drug strategies in Central America are worsening deforestation, threatening many species of birds
  34. Athletes looking for a competitive edge may find it within their gut microbiome
  35. Unequal access to quantum information education may limit progress in this emerging field − now is the time to improve
  36. COVID-19 devastated teacher morale − and it hasn’t recovered
  37. GOP attacks against Kamala Harris were already bad – they are about to get worse
  38. US says it wants Palestinians to have a country of their own – but its actions say otherwise
  39. Amid humanitarian crisis and ongoing fighting, Africa’s war-scarred Sahel region faces new threat: Ethno-mercenaries
  40. How do 9 states get by with no income tax? A tax expert explains the trade-offs they choose
  41. Bob Newhart was more than an actor or comedian – he was a literary master
  42. Bugs thrive in urban Los Angeles – volunteers’ traps reveal biodiversity hot spots for city insects and spiders
  43. Diabetes and obesity can damage the liver to the point of failure – but few people know their risk of developing liver disease
  44. The Yezidi genocide devastated Iraq’s community 10 years ago − but the roots of the prejudice that fueled it were much deeper
  45. Buses weren’t the only civil rights battleground in Montgomery – the city’s parks still reflect a history of segregation
  46. Until 1968, presidential candidates were picked by party conventions – a process revived by Biden’s withdrawal from race
  47. Massive IT outage spotlights major vulnerabilities in the global information ecosystem
  48. What is Catholic Integralism?
  49. Online rumors sparked by the Trump assassination attempt spread rapidly, on both ends of the political spectrum
  50. Biden’s and Trump’s ages would prevent them running many top companies – and for good reason