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Why Paris?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageA patrol in front of Notre Dame November 15. Gonzalo Fuentes/Reuters

Why Paris? I am struggling for answers after cold-blooded mass killers struck the French capital for the second time in a year.

For a few months I lived next door to the Le Carillon bar in the Rue Bichat. I wandered home along the canal, enjoying the lively chatter at the tables...

Read more: Why Paris?

The promise and perils of predictive policing based on big data

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageOff to nab a would-be criminal?Steve Koukoulas, CC BY-NC-ND

Police departments, like everyone else, would like to be more effective while spending less. Given the tremendous attention to big data in recent years, and the value it has provided in fields ranging from astronomy to medicine, it should be no surprise that police departments are using...

Read more: The promise and perils of predictive policing based on big data

Why have the demands of black students changed so little since the 1960s?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhat's new about black students' demands?Beverly Yuen Thompson, CC BY-NC

The student protests at the University of Missouri and on other campuses across the country have brought greater attention to the educational plight of black students.

The protests have exposed how experiences of black students in predominantly white campus environments are...

Read more: Why have the demands of black students changed so little since the 1960s?

How Islamic law can take on ISIS

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageAt prayer in Paris.Jacky Naegelen/Reuters

The media coverage of the terrorist atrocities of Friday November 13 in Paris would seem to promote an almost mythical image of the Islamic State (ISIS). What humanity needs, however, is to demystify ISIS as a criminal organization. And that need is particularly important in my community – the Muslim...

Read more: How Islamic law can take on ISIS

Egypt's Sisi signals shift toward Muslim Brotherhood

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBritish Prime Minister Cameron meets Egypt's President Sisi outside of 10 Downing Street in London.Stefan Wermuth/REUTERS

During what was otherwise an ordinary diplomatic visit to the United Kingdom at the beginning of November, Egypt’s President Sisi signaled a significant shift in Egyptian domestic policy and regional politics.

After an...

Read more: Egypt's Sisi signals shift toward Muslim Brotherhood

Scientist at work: searching for tiny neutrinos in the South Pole's thick ice

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIce cold physics: hunting for neutrinos in Antarctica.Sven Lidström, IceCube/NSF, CC BY-NC

Standing at the South Pole is the next-best thing to being on another planet. If you walk a few hundred yards away from the buildings that make up the National Science Foundation’s research station, you see a featureless plain of snow and ice, most...

Read more: Scientist at work: searching for tiny neutrinos in the South Pole's thick ice

More Articles ...

  1. College students go online to learn about sex
  2. How existentialism can shield us from the free market's dark side
  3. The long and troubled racial past of Mizzou
  4. Can listening to music help you sleep?
  5. Yes, eastern coyotes are hybrids, but the 'coywolf' is not a thing
  6. Unsurprised by Missouri – scholars on the roots of racial unrest on campus
  7. Canada could shed its split personality on climate change at Paris talks
  8. Could a smartphone app help stop the next polio outbreak in Pakistan?
  9. Norwegians using 'Texas' to mean 'crazy' actually isn't so crazy
  10. Social Security, Ponzi schemes and why the government isn't 'stealing' your money
  11. Under the sea: Russia, China and American control of the waterways
  12. Human biases hold key to solving both Europe's refugee crisis and climate change
  13. Body hair helps animals stay clean – and could inspire self-cleaning technologies
  14. Does psychotherapy research with trauma survivors underestimate the patient-therapist relationship?
  15. Scholars: Fox Biz did its job, debate highlighted political differences
  16. Does Missouri president ouster offer lessons to universities grappling with a racist past?
  17. In targeting Exxon on climate, New York puts all corporations on notice
  18. Fox relies on polls too much in planning GOP debate
  19. Why the world still needs nonprofits
  20. How ratings-driven presidential debates are weakening American democracy
  21. Academic print books are dying. What's the future?
  22. US and Chinese tempers rise in the South China Sea
  23. Businesses can actually sue you for posting negative reviews – and now Congress is fighting back
  24. If the US had price on carbon, would Keystone XL have made sense?
  25. As the US heads to climate talks, it seeks a plan to 'trust but verify'
  26. How the science of human behavior is beginning to reshape the US government
  27. Teaching assistants like me? Here's what could change
  28. How computers broke science – and what we can do to fix it
  29. Fitness versus fatness: which matters more?
  30. The activists' playbook behind Obama's Keystone rejection
  31. The Keystone XL pipeline debate is over, but our infrastructure needs are not
  32. Hollywood shines a spotlight on real journalism
  33. Jobs report shows why it's time Speaker Ryan and President Obama sat down for a beer
  34. Black Panthers and Black Lives Matter -- parallels and progress
  35. Labor's rank and file still believe in collective bargaining's power to bolster middle class
  36. Think you're reading the news for free? New research shows you're likely paying with your privacy
  37. It's not rocket science: we need a better way to get to space
  38. Will the Arctic shift from a carbon sink to a carbon source?
  39. 'Powerpoint was not his thing': a poem on teaching and technology
  40. On the 120th anniversary of the X-ray, a look at how it changed our view of the world
  41. Ben Carson: token candidate
  42. How we got to now: why the US and Europe went different ways on GMOs
  43. How do our brains reconstruct the visual world?
  44. Here are some more reasons why liberal arts matter
  45. Labs make new, dangerous synthetic cannabinoid drugs faster than we can ban them
  46. How campaign finance disenfranchises America's silent majority of socialists
  47. Do refugees have a 'right' to hospitality?
  48. Sam Smith's ambitious attempt to reshape the Bond song lands with a whimper
  49. Ted Cruz's birther problem
  50. Delayed or killed, Keystone pipeline will live on as political touchstone