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Four steps to appointing a Supreme Court justice

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

With the unexpected death of United States Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia this weekend, the political battle lines have been drawn. President Obama has made clear that he plans to nominate a successor. His opposition is equally adamant that he should not do so, but allow the choice to be made by the next president.

Many Republicans, including...

Read more: Four steps to appointing a Supreme Court justice

Justice Antonin Scalia: more quotable than influential

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Justice Antonin Scalia will be remembered for his brilliant intellect, his acerbic wit and his insistence on interpreting law by reference to text and history.

He was long the intellectual leader of the conservative wing of the United States Supreme Court. However, he often seemed more interested in being a leader than in having followers. He was...

Read more: Justice Antonin Scalia: more quotable than influential

The Supreme Court just handed the next president a powerful lever to control U.S. climate policy

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBy putting a temporary halt to Obama's cornerstone climate policy, the Supreme Court puts the next president in the driver's seat. tabor-roeder/flickr, CC BY-SA

Earlier this week, the U.S. Supreme Court decided to halt, at least temporarily, implementation of one of the central components of the federal effort to constrain U.S. climate emissions,...

Read more: The Supreme Court just handed the next president a powerful lever to control U.S. climate policy

Bernie Sanders isn't a woman, but is he a better feminist than Hillary Clinton?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Pundits in the U.S. see Hillary Clinton in deep trouble with women voters after her spectacular loss to Bernie Sanders in New Hampshire.

While Clinton’s three percent lead among women voters in Iowa helped give her a whisper-thin win in the nation’s first caucus, her 11 percent deficit among women voters in New Hampshire helped Bernie...

Read more: Bernie Sanders isn't a woman, but is he a better feminist than Hillary Clinton?

Facing a physician shortage, can we leave medical school grads on the sidelines?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIs the doctor in?Exam room image via www.shutterstock.com.

Dr. Heidi Schmidt cannot practice medicine. The problem is not that she lost her license or was named in too many malpractice lawsuits. To the contrary, she has never held a license to practice medicine. Yet she has earned not only an M.D. but also master’s degrees in public health...

Read more: Facing a physician shortage, can we leave medical school grads on the sidelines?

In blocking EPA Clean Power Plan, is the Supreme Court wading deeper into politics?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Speaking at a law school last week, Chief Justice John Roberts complained that sharp partisan criticisms of the Supreme Court have led the public to believe that it is just another political branch of government.

However, the Chief Justice may have reinforced the impression that the Court plays politics when he joined four other Justices on...

Read more: In blocking EPA Clean Power Plan, is the Supreme Court wading deeper into politics?

Why music education needs to incorporate more diversity

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageClassrooms are becoming more diverse. So, why is music education focused on Western music?State Farm, CC BY-NC-ND

As presidential candidate Donald Trump continues to insist upon banning Muslims from entering the U.S. and espousing a need for a wall along the Mexican border, heating up anti-immigration and racist rhetoric, it’s essential we...

Read more: Why music education needs to incorporate more diversity

Yes, robots will steal our jobs, but don't worry, we'll get new ones

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The U.S. economy added 2.7 million jobs in 2015, capping the best two-year stretch of employment growth since the late ‘90’s, pushing the unemployment rate down to five percent.

But to listen to the doomsayers, it’s just a matter of time before the rapid advance of technology makes most of today’s workers obsolete –...

Read more: Yes, robots will steal our jobs, but don't worry, we'll get new ones

More Articles ...

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  2. What happens when LIGO texts you to say it's detected one of Einstein's predicted gravitational waves
  3. Many low-income students use only their phone to get online. What are they missing?
  4. Dry is the new normal: Southwest U.S. has gotten drier and more prone to droughts
  5. The police beating that opened America's eyes to Jim Crow's brutality
  6. Should you be my Valentine? Research helps identify good and bad romantic relationships
  7. UV radiation: the risks and benefits of a healthy glow
  8. How punitive, omniscient gods may have encouraged the expansion of human society
  9. The Conversation US is hiring in Atlanta
  10. Did independent voters decide the New Hampshire primary?
  11. Exposed to a deluge of digital photos, we're feeling the psychological effects of image overload
  12. Obama's speech at Baltimore mosque was powerful, but was anyone listening?
  13. Shouldn't there be a time limit on Mickey's copyright?
  14. Utilities, solar energy and the fight for your roof
  15. Sanders, Trump win big in polarized New Hampshire as voters revolt against the establishment
  16. Are tighter EPA controls on mercury pollution worth it?
  17. Clinton, Sanders and the changing face of the Democratic Party
  18. Feeling sleepy? You might be at risk of falsely confessing to a crime you did not commit
  19. The Federal response in Malheur and far right extremism
  20. Why schools need to introduce computing in all subjects
  21. In a New York City neighborhood, the challenges – and potential – for America's urban future
  22. How should America fund its highways in the 21st century?
  23. How the black middle class was attacked by Woodrow Wilson’s administration
  24. Super Bowl 50's data deluge: How much is too much?
  25. When writing biography, should any part of a life be off-limits?
  26. Super Bowl advertisers spend $5 million for 30 seconds: is there a better use for that cash?
  27. If football is deadly, why do we still watch?
  28. Why raising the minimum wage isn't the best way to reduce inequality
  29. The rise and fall of the Knoedler, New York's most notorious art gallery
  30. Labeling people as 'The mentally ill' increases stigma
  31. Will extreme weather events get Americans to act on climate change?
  32. New initiative from Governor Jerry Brown could reform sentencing in California, cut prison terms
  33. Evolving our way to artificial intelligence
  34. How humans threaten pumas just by being nearby
  35. How do we know if we're in a global recession?
  36. Toxic lead can stay in the body for years after exposure
  37. How much screen time is good for kids?
  38. The science behind why so many women want to befriend gay men
  39. Intersectionality: how gender interacts with other social identities to shape bias
  40. Are the media killing the New Hampshire primary?
  41. Good news on rain forests: they bounce back strong, storing more carbon than thought
  42. Three ways synthetic biology could annihilate Zika and other mosquito-borne diseases
  43. O.J. Simpson's return: what we've learned in the 20 years since the trial of the century
  44. Why are so many Americans struggling to save for retirement?
  45. Want to improve motivation? Try this reward
  46. Iran nuclear deal: how to ensure compliance?
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  48. Corn ethanol: the rise and fall of a political force
  49. Iowa caucus: scholars around the globe react
  50. Why do fewer black students get identified as gifted?