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What Berkeley's budget cuts tell us about America's public universities

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCan Berkeley stay Berkeley after budget cuts?Peter Jackson, CC BY-NC-ND

The University of California at Berkeley recently announced a financial restructuring due to mounting structural deficits, including a US$150 million shortfall in the current budget year. All areas of university’s operations – academic, administrative and athletic...

Read more: What Berkeley's budget cuts tell us about America's public universities

How women change outcomes in courtrooms and beyond

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDoes gender make a difference on a jury?Jury trial via www.shutterstock.com

Despite progress in recent decades, women remain underrepresented (or not represented at all) in many aspects of political and civic life.

In the United States, the current Congress is about 20 percent female; there has not (yet) been a female president (out of 44 in total);...

Read more: How women change outcomes in courtrooms and beyond

How not to wind up voting for a president you don't actually agree with

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageBut did you vote for the candidate that best matches your beliefs?jamelah e., CC BY-NC-ND

When any American enters the voting booth, he (or she) is free to cast his private ballot for any candidate he favors. On the surface, this seems rather obvious, and easy. We each privately vote for the candidate we wish to support. We choose based on our...

Read more: How not to wind up voting for a president you don't actually agree with

We helped uncover a public health crisis in Flint, but learned there are costs to doing good science

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Our team of more than two dozen students and research scientists at Virginia Tech has spent much of the past year analyzing and publicizing unsafe drinking water in Flint, Michigan.

Our “open science” research collaboration with Flint residents revealed high levels of lead, Legionella and damage to potable water infrastructure due to a...

Read more: We helped uncover a public health crisis in Flint, but learned there are costs to doing good science

Oscars 2016: expert reaction

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The buzz leading up to this year’s Academy Awards was tempered with protests against an institution that has remained too white and too male for too long. How would host Chris Rock handle the issue of race? Would a theme emerge among the winners? Our panel of experts break down some of the night’s biggest questions, surprises and...

Read more: Oscars 2016: expert reaction

African-American women could be decisive on Super Tuesday

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

As the Democratic nominating contest speeds up, African-American voters – especially women – have some tough, and influential, choices to make.

South Carolina is the first primary where African Americans are the majority of Democratic voters, controlling 55 percent of the vote. That makes South Carolina a battleground for black votes,...

Read more: African-American women could be decisive on Super Tuesday

Apple versus FBI: All Writs Act's age should not bar its use

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHow hard should it be for the FBI to get access to your iPhone's data?Pexels.com, CC BY

A federal magistrate judge in California has issued a warrant ordering Apple to assist the FBI in accessing data on an iPhone used by a suspect in the December 2015 San Bernardino mass shooting.

Apple’s public refusal to comply with the order – and...

Read more: Apple versus FBI: All Writs Act's age should not bar its use

Subprime gets bad rap in 'Big Short' but is key to easing housing affordability crisis

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
image

Anyone who’s dug into the 2008 financial crisis knows the role that bundling and selling subprime housing loans played in bringing the world to the brink of economic collapse – out-of-control behaviors well-depicted in the movie “The Big Short.”

But one thing I hope “The Big Short” doesn’t do is further...

Read more: Subprime gets bad rap in 'Big Short' but is key to easing housing affordability crisis

Want the economy to grow? It's time to look at cities and efficiency

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTraffic jams in cities, such as this one in Atlanta, have economic costs, including lower productivity.Gregor Smith/flickr, CC BY

The economy is a hot topic in the presidential debates and is among the top public concerns. But the “economy” is a loose and hazy notion and, for politicians, a convenient place to make promises.

Even the...

Read more: Want the economy to grow? It's time to look at cities and efficiency

More Articles ...

  1. Beyond invisibility: engineering light with metamaterials
  2. Three important quotes from the GOP debate, explained
  3. Why Bernie will burn out in Dixie
  4. In FBI versus Apple, government strengthened tech's hand on privacy
  5. Leap day: fixing the faults in our stars
  6. Subprime gets bad rap in 'Big Short' but is key to easing affordability crisis
  7. Why boys need to have conversations about emotional intimacy in classrooms
  8. The surprising link between postwar suburban development and today's inner-city lead poisoning
  9. Clinical trials for childhood cancer drugs are critical, but parents don't always understand what they are signing up for
  10. Why it's time to end in-person voting for good
  11. The mysterious biomechanics of riding – and balancing – a bicycle
  12. Trump's winning streak reveals bigotry's appeal in GOP
  13. Evolution of moral outrage: I'll punish your bad behavior to make me look good
  14. How driverless vehicles will redefine mobility and change car culture
  15. Cyberwar is here to stay
  16. Passwords, privacy and protection: can Apple meet FBI's demand without creating a 'backdoor'?
  17. Five years after the Arab Spring, how does the Middle East use social media?
  18. Former clerk on Justice Antonin Scalia and his impact on the Supreme Court
  19. How should we measure the size of a university's endowment?
  20. How digital technology spawned retro's revival
  21. Clean energy could save hundreds of billions in health costs every year
  22. Has World War Three begun?
  23. How do we know the Zika virus will cost the world $3.5 billion?
  24. Zika: _Aedes aegypti_ mosquitoes love biting humans, and that's why they spread viruses so well
  25. Hospitals rationing drugs behind closed doors: a civil rights issue
  26. To meet the Paris climate goals, do we need to engineer the climate?
  27. A beginner's guide to sex differences in the brain
  28. A closer look at Rubio, Cruz and the Latino vote in Nevada
  29. Why do we pretend Supreme Court justices are anything but political officials?
  30. Why big tech companies are open-sourcing their AI systems
  31. U.S. mayors desperate to fix crumbling infrastructure but states, feds hold them back
  32. Making sense of the Scalia conspiracy theory
  33. Trump's South Carolina victory could make him unstoppable in GOP race
  34. Four reasons why Clinton's Nevada victory is important
  35. The GOP moves to South Carolina, the first red state battleground
  36. Malheur occupation is over, but the war for America's public lands rages on
  37. Extreme numbers: the unimaginably large and small pop up in recent experiments
  38. With bodies piling up, the war on Mexican journalists has no end in sight
  39. Obama may be a lame duck, but his final budget isn't
  40. DoD detainee photos raise disturbing questions about transparency
  41. Pregnant, in prison and facing health risks: prenatal care for incarcerated women
  42. Straight A students may not be the best innovators
  43. Solving 'Darwin's Paradox': why coral island hotspots exist in an oceanic desert
  44. When do children learn to write? Earlier than you might think
  45. Why statin users should still get the flu shot, even if cholesterol drugs make it less effective
  46. Five years of war in Syria: five lessons Western leaders haven't learned
  47. John Kasich's rhetoric versus his record in Ohio
  48. Curbing cravings: can kitchen chaos influence cookie consumption?
  49. Eying exomoons in the search for E.T.
  50. What Scalia's death means for environment and climate