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Veterans' health care: doctors outside the VA need to know more about the veterans they treat

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCivilian doctors might not know that their patients have served in the military. In this photo Marines march around the World Trade Center memorial after participating in a memorial run in 2012.MarineCorps NewYork/Flickr, CC BY

Each year the military discharges over 240,000 veterans to reintegrate into civilian society. It’s a professional...

Read more: Veterans' health care: doctors outside the VA need to know more about the veterans they treat

Woody Guthrie, 'Old Man Trump' and a real estate empire's racist foundations

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWoody Guthrie lived in Fred Trump's Beach Haven apartment complex for two years.

In December 1950, Woody Guthrie signed his name to the lease of a new apartment in Brooklyn. Even now, over half a century later, that uninspiring document prompts a double-take.

Below all the legal jargon is the signature of the man who had composed “This Land Is...

Read more: Woody Guthrie, 'Old Man Trump' and a real estate empire's racist foundations

Confessions of a MOOC professor: three things I learned and two things I worry about

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCould MOOCs transform higher ed?U.S. Army, CC BY

We have heard a lot of talk about MOOCs, or massive online open courses, over the last couple of years. On the plus side, MOOCs often draw enormous enrollments and are easy to sign up for and use; all you need, it seems, is an Internet connection and an interest to learn.

On the down side, they have...

Read more: Confessions of a MOOC professor: three things I learned and two things I worry about

The hottest year on record signals that global warming is alive and well

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWildfires devastated large parts of California and the West, which has been suffering from a historic drought. Max Whittaker/Reuters

The year 2015 has proven to be another year of temperature records. Data released by NASA and NOAA (National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration) show that in 2015, the global mean surface temperature – the...

Read more: The hottest year on record signals that global warming is alive and well

Europe's failed response to refugee crisis risks fraying local labor markets

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThere's no end in sight to the wave of refugees seeking solace in Europe.Reuters

Europe’s refugee crisis neither began nor ended when the body of a Kurdish boy was found washed up on a Turkish beach in September.

In all, he was just one of 3,770 people who lost their lives in 2015 as over a million people crossed into Europe fleeing wars in...

Read more: Europe's failed response to refugee crisis risks fraying local labor markets

How Chinese mix of frugality and risk-taking is driving global stock markets wild

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFacing a sea of red.Reuters

Plunging Chinese stocks have been sending worsening ripples across global markets all year, prompting fears of spillovers and recessions.

China’s Shanghai Composite Index lost 8 percent last week alone and is down more than 20 percent since a recent high in December, putting it in bear-market territory. That slide...

Read more: How Chinese mix of frugality and risk-taking is driving global stock markets wild

California's Aliso Canyon methane leak: climate disaster or opportunity?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLooking for relief: Southern California Gas Company and outside experts work on a relief well at the Aliso Canyon designed to stop the ongoing natural gas leak. Dean Musgrove/Reuters

This October, a large leak was discovered at the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility in northwest Los Angeles. The leak is a serious health risk to nearby...

Read more: California's Aliso Canyon methane leak: climate disaster or opportunity?

Picasso the...sculptor? Disputed purchase brings attention to lesser-known aspect of his art

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePablo Picasso's Bull (1958) is constructed with plywood, tree branch, nails and screws. © 2015 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

A legal battle has erupted between art dealer Larry Gagosian and the royal family of Qatar, with each side claiming to have purchased a Picasso statue from Picasso’s daughter...

Read more: Picasso the...sculptor? Disputed purchase brings attention to lesser-known aspect of his art

More Articles ...

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  2. New genetically engineered American chestnut will help restore the decimated, iconic tree
  3. U.S. laws protect police, while endangering civilians
  4. Fulfilling Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream: the role for higher education
  5. Cyberattack on Ukraine grid: here's how it worked and perhaps why it was done
  6. Great night for Sanders could be turning point in race
  7. Knowledge comes from death’s release: Blackstar recalls David Bowie’s influence on goth
  8. Is Bernie Sanders really a socialist? And how could he like Denmark?
  9. Basic income for all could lift millions out of poverty – and change how we think about inequality
  10. The fourth industrial revolution: what does WEF's Klaus Schwab leave out?
  11. If we want medicine to be evidence-based, what should we think when the evidence doesn't agree?
  12. How do you build a mirror for one of the world's biggest telescopes?
  13. Four quotes from the sixth GOP presidential debate, explained by experts
  14. Why presidential debates need real-time fact-checking
  15. To cut emissions faster, U.S. should ditch tax credit-based subsidies for renewable energy
  16. Under the spell of a generator's thrum, a Faulkner masterpiece was born
  17. Race and racism after Obama: where do we go from here?
  18. Are Powerball drawings and 'Quick Pick' numbers really random?
  19. Attack on unions shows why we need a new social contract governing work
  20. If being too clean makes us sick, why isn't getting dirty the solution?
  21. In a driverless future, what happens to today's drivers?
  22. Obama's final State of the Union: scholars react
  23. Odds are $1.5 billion Powerball winner will end up bankrupt
  24. What Marco Rubio's heels say about fashion – and height – in American politics
  25. Thinking innovatively about the risks of tech innovation
  26. Can businesses succeed in a world of corruption (without paying bribes)?
  27. What is the right response to North Korea's fourth nuclear test?
  28. Are plugs for pizza a breach of journalistic ethics?
  29. Can schools punish students for off-campus, online speech?
  30. Explainer: Why can't anyone tell me how much this surgery will cost?
  31. Could online 'slacktivists' actually help Making a Murderer's Steven Avery?
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  34. Federal control of western land: two perspectives
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  37. The twisted roots of U.S. land policy in the West
  38. Can we curb the opioid abuse epidemic by rethinking chronic pain?
  39. What Pantone's colors of 2016 mean for the future of design
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  41. The Paris Agreement: the first _local_ global environmental pact
  42. Can 10,000-character tweets boost Twitter's flatlining user growth?
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  44. Quest to find bitcoin's founder highlights currency's biggest threat: the taxman
  45. Far more microplastics floating in oceans than thought
  46. It's too late for a two-state solution in Israel-Palestine
  47. Playing 'serious games,' adults learn to solve thorny real-world problems
  48. A small Norwegian city might hold the answer to beating the winter blues
  49. Malheur occupation in Oregon: whose land is it really?
  50. Affordable Care Act's push to consolidate health care to curb costs may backfire