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Fewer diplomats, more armed force defines US leadership today

  • Written by Monica Duffy Toft, Professor of International Politics and Director, Center for Strategic Studies, Fletcher School, Tufts University
Members of the U.S. Army Special Forces on Aug. 30, 2002 in Afghanistan. AP Photo/Wally Santana

A strong legacy of U.S. leadership and engagement in global politics has been reduced today to what I call kinetic diplomacy – diplomacy by armed force.

As of March 2018, the Trump administration has appointed only 70 of 188 U.S. ambassadors. At...

Read more: Fewer diplomats, more armed force defines US leadership today

Trump's $60 billion in China tariffs will create more problems than they solve

  • Written by William Hauk, Associate Professor of Economics, University of South Carolina
Business such as California winemakers could be hurt by the new tariffs as a result of retaliation.AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein

After spending seven months investigating whether China is engaged in unfair trade practices, the Trump administration announced March 22 that it will impose tariffs on as much as US$60 billion in Chinese imports.

The...

Read more: Trump's $60 billion in China tariffs will create more problems than they solve

Gun control and March for Our Lives: 4 essential reads

  • Written by Naomi Schalit, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation US

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of stories from The Conversation’s archive.

Students from across the country will march in Washington, D.C., on Saturday. Similar marches will take place elsewhere in the U.S. Organized by survivors of the Parkland school shooting in Florida, the protesters want Congress to pass gun control...

Read more: Gun control and March for Our Lives: 4 essential reads

March for Our Lives awakens the spirit of student and media activism of the 1960s

  • Written by Errol Salamon, Postdoctoral Researcher and Visting Scholar in Communication, University of Pennsylvania
Students rally in front of the White House in Washington, March 14, 2018.AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster

A student movement against gun violence is receiving sustained news coverage.

Students are using social and news media to build momentum and advocate for legislation in the wake of a Feb. 14 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland,...

Read more: March for Our Lives awakens the spirit of student and media activism of the 1960s

'Big Tech' isn't one big monopoly – it's 5 companies all in different businesses

  • Written by Amanda Lotz, Professor of Media Studies, University of Michigan
It may seem convenient to think of technology companies as similar, but they're really not.The Conversation, CC BY-NC

Public concern about Facebook’s power in society – and in politics – has skyrocketed in the wake of revelations that users’ data was analyzed by a U.K.-based marketing firm and used to construct highly...

Read more: 'Big Tech' isn't one big monopoly – it's 5 companies all in different businesses

Why Trump will weather Stormy

  • Written by Monika L. McDermott, Professor of Political Science, Fordham University

Donald Trump’s opponents have long been waiting for some sort of scandal to bring him down, and they may think they have finally found it in pornographic film star Stormy Daniels.

Daniels alleges she had an extramarital affair with Donald Trump in 2006 and was subsequently paid off by a Trump lawyer to stay silent during the presidential...

Read more: Why Trump will weather Stormy

Why community and not confinement will end TB

  • Written by Eric Friedman, Researcher, Georgetown University
A prisoner looks out a window on March 26, 2015, from Zhdanivskaya prison in Ukraine, were TB is rampant.AP Photo/Mstyslav Chernov

The global response to tuberculosis has saved millions of lives; TB treatment saved 53 million lives between 2000 and 2016. Yet each year millions still suffer, and often die, from this preventable, treatable and...

Read more: Why community and not confinement will end TB

Archbishop Oscar Romero was gunned down inside his own church 38 years ago. Soon he'll become El Salvador's first saint

  • Written by Michael E. Lee, Associate Professor of Theology and Latin American Studies, Fordham University

On March 24, 1980, the archbishop of San Salvador was shot inside his own church in a deliberate, cold-blooded murder that shocked the world.

Now, almost 40 years later, the Catholic Church is preparing to make the slain religious leader a saint. In early March, Pope Francis approved a miracle attributed to Monsignor Oscar Arnulfo Romero –...

Read more: Archbishop Oscar Romero was gunned down inside his own church 38 years ago. Soon he'll become El...

Inching closer to a world without polio

  • Written by Christine Crudo Blackburn, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University
What will it take to finish polio off in the last three countries where it persists?AP Photo/B.K. Bangash

At its height in the 1940s and ‘50s, polio paralyzed more than 35,000 Americans every year. But thanks to vaccines as well as good hygiene and sanitation practices, polio has largely been forgotten in the developed world.

Now, even in...

Read more: Inching closer to a world without polio

Federal employees work for both Democrats and Republicans – even Kellyanne Conway

  • Written by Matthew May, Research Associate, Boise State University

Federal ethics lawyers determined earlier this month that White House adviser Kellyanne Conway violated the Hatch Act, which prohibits a variety of political activities by federal employees. During two television appearances last year, Conway, a Republican, had encouraged Alabama voters to vote against the Democratic senate candidate in a special...

Read more: Federal employees work for both Democrats and Republicans – even Kellyanne Conway

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  4. Mitochondria mutation mystery solved: Random sorting helps get rid of duds
  5. Want to fight crime? Plant some flowers with your neighbor
  6. How energy storage is starting to rewire the electricity industry
  7. School resource officers can prevent tragedies, but training is key
  8. Public support for animal rights goes beyond keeping dogs out of overhead bins
  9. Red state, blue state: How colors took sides in politics
  10. How do forensic engineers investigate bridge collapses, like the one in Miami?
  11. I treat patients on Medicaid, and I don't see undeserving poor people
  12. Regulating Facebook won't prevent data breaches
  13. After Tempe fatality, self-driving car developers must engage with public now or risk rejection
  14. Bombed into oblivion: The lost oasis of Damascus
  15. Asians could opt out of naming a country of origin on the 2020 census, a policymaker's nightmare
  16. A clue for how to reduce HIV transmission when using hormonal contraceptives
  17. Threat assessments crucial to prevent school shootings
  18. Think Facebook can manipulate you? Look out for virtual reality
  19. Facebook is killing democracy with its personality profiling data
  20. Tariffs won't save American steel jobs. But we can still help steelworkers
  21. Buried, altered, silenced: 4 ways government climate information has changed since Trump took office
  22. Eager to dye your hair with 'nontoxic' graphene nanoparticles? Not so fast!
  23. On his 250th birthday, Joseph Fourier's math still makes a difference
  24. Some officials want to ban school suspensions – here's how that could backfire
  25. Merit matters in US immigration, but agreeing on what 'merit' means is complicated
  26. Silver nanoparticles in clothing wash out – and may threaten human health and the environment
  27. Why Denmark dominates the World Happiness Report rankings year after year
  28. MS-13 is a street gang, not a drug cartel – and the difference matters
  29. Trump believes he can make an Israeli-Palestinian deal. Don't hold your breath
  30. Kurdish troops fight for freedom — and women's equality — on battlegrounds across Middle East
  31. Why Americans are unhappier than ever – and how to fix it
  32. Recent stock market sell-off foreshadows a new Great Recession
  33. You're probably paying more for your car loan or mortgage than you should
  34. Sessions suing California is the latest battle in a centuries-old war for power over immigration
  35. A history of loneliness
  36. My Lai: 50 years after, American soldiers' shocking crimes must be remembered
  37. Black holes aren't totally black, and other insights from Stephen Hawking's groundbreaking work
  38. Xi's indefinite grasp on power has finally captured the West's attention – now what?
  39. Thomas Eakins: Brilliant painter, gifted photographer ... sexual predator?
  40. Just competing in March Madness is a fundraising win for the schools
  41. Americans should welcome the age of unexceptionalism
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  43. Stephen Hawking warned about the perils of artificial intelligence – yet AI gave him a voice
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  45. Zero tolerance discipline policies won't fix school shootings
  46. What is a tariff? An economist explains
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  48. Pompeo's rise will make Mideast war more likely
  49. Can Haspel bring the CIA in from the cold?
  50. Haspel is Trump's chance to reset his bad start with the CIA