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The Conversation

Why America urgently needs to improve K-12 civic education

  • Written by Abby Kiesa, Director of Impact, Tufts University

The tone of this presidential election, often called “uncivil,” has led many to call for an urgent improvement of civic education in America.

Civic education can teach citizens how to deliberate, even when they have political differences. It can enable citizens to find solutions to many problems such as school attendance, economic...

Read more: Why America urgently needs to improve K-12 civic education

Drug prices: Where do we go after the Election?

  • Written by Rachel Sachs, Associate Professor of Law, Washington University in St Louis

Martin Shkreli. Valeant Pharmaceuticals. Mylan. These names have become big news, but just a year ago, most Americans devoted little time and attention to the question of pharmaceutical pricing. Now, a Kaiser Health Tracking Poll released Oct. 27 suggests many people care more about the increasing prices of drugs than they do about any other...

Read more: Drug prices: Where do we go after the Election?

A fractured system: where do you go when you suddenly need health care?

  • Written by Keith E. Kocher, Assistant Professor, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan
imageJogger with ankle injury. Via Shutterstock.From www.shuttertock.com

Consider the last time you, a family member, or a friend encountered an unexpected health concern. Did you twist your ankle and weren’t sure if it was broken? Did you develop discomfort in your chest and weren’t sure if it was indigestion or a heart attack? Did your...

Read more: A fractured system: where do you go when you suddenly need health care?

Are we streaming into political participation through a personalized, on-demand TV diet?

  • Written by Jacob Groshek, Assistant Professor, Emerging Media Studies, Boston University
imageCouch potato or engaged citizen?Woman on couch via shutterstock.com

Media and scholarly reports have linked the binge-watching of streaming television to personal health problems. The effects of heavy use of platforms such as Netflix, Hulu and Amazon Prime have been reported to include depression, chronic illness, weight gain, sleep disorders and...

Read more: Are we streaming into political participation through a personalized, on-demand TV diet?

Why do so many believe Hillary Clinton is inauthentic?

  • Written by Shawn Parry-Giles, Professor of Communication, University of Maryland

In the national spotlight for nearly 25 years, Hillary Clinton remains the candidate voters still struggle to know. Labels like “guarded,” “secretive,” “evasive,” even mysterious have dogged her since she first introduced herself to the American public during Bill Clinton’s 1992 presidential campaign.

The...

Read more: Why do so many believe Hillary Clinton is inauthentic?

Why aren't environmentalists supporting a carbon tax in Washington state?

  • Written by Lucas Davis, Associate Professor, University of California, Berkeley

I used to live in Washington state. I’m no longer registered to vote there, but if I were, I would vote “Yes” on Nov. 8 for the Washington Carbon Emission Tax and Sales Tax Reduction, also known as Initiative 732, or I-732.

I-732 would make Washington the first U.S. state to have a carbon tax. The tax would be levied on refineries...

Read more: Why aren't environmentalists supporting a carbon tax in Washington state?

In getting 'new' Clinton emails, did the FBI violate the Constitution?

  • Written by Clark D. Cunningham, W. Lee Burge Chair in Law & Ethics; Director, National Institute for Teaching Ethics & Professionalism, Georgia State University
imageHow is it holding up in this digital age?U.S. National Archives and Records Administration

FBI Director James Comey’s Oct. 28 bombshell letter to Congress – which has the potential to affect the presidential election – may be based on illegally obtained emails.

In his letter, Comey says the FBI “has learned” of the...

Read more: In getting 'new' Clinton emails, did the FBI violate the Constitution?

Why we'll always be obsessed with – and afraid of – monsters

  • Written by Leo Braudy, Leo S. Bing Chair in English and American Literature, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
image'Frankenstein' via www.shutterstock.com

Fear continues to saturate our lives: fear of nuclear destruction, fear of climate change, fear of the subversive, and fear of foreigners.

But a recent Rolling Stone article about our “age of fear” notes that most Americans are living “in the safest place at the safest time in human...

Read more: Why we'll always be obsessed with – and afraid of – monsters

How to get the most candy on Halloween (without resorting to extortion)

  • Written by Jay L. Zagorsky, Economist and Research Scientist, The Ohio State University
imageSeems those sharp fangs worked.Trick or treat via www.shutterstock.com

Halloween is here, the night every year when children dress up in costumes and go “trick or treating.”

On the surface, that activity appears to be a relatively benign one. What could be more innocent than cute youngsters collecting sweets?

Halloween, however, is...

Read more: How to get the most candy on Halloween (without resorting to extortion)

How women are harmed by calling sexual assault 'locker room talk'

  • Written by Kathryn Holland, Doctoral Candidate in Psychology and Women's Studies, University of Michigan

Over the past few weeks, millions of Americans have watched a tape from 2005, featuring Donald Trump bragging about sexually assaulting women:

“I just start kissing them. It’s like a magnet. Just kiss. I don’t even wait. And when you’re a star, they let you do it. You can do anything. Grab them by the pussy. You can do...

Read more: How women are harmed by calling sexual assault 'locker room talk'

More Articles ...

  1. Is the Islamic State finished? Five possible scenarios
  2. Millions more voters legalizing marijuana won't clear up regulatory haze
  3. The World Series of the Apocalypse?
  4. Could razing Hitler’s first home backfire?
  5. How a new generation is changing evangelical Christianity
  6. Why Zika has infected so many people in Puerto Rico
  7. Julian Assange and WikiLeaks are harming diplomacy more than the Clinton campaign
  8. What is the secret to success?
  9. Will US energy policy push fossil fuels or renewable energy? Six essential reads
  10. Deep underground, smartphones can save miners' lives
  11. Turning diamonds' defects into long-term 3-D data storage
  12. Three reasons the US doesn't have universal health coverage
  13. Here's how the next president could work with Congress to fix Obamacare
  14. Preserving fright, one haunted house at a time
  15. What's at risk if scientists don't think strategically before talking politics
  16. Here's why our next president should block AT T's Time Warner tie-up
  17. In a post-truth election, clicks trump facts
  18. Trump's wall ignores the economic logic of undocumented immigrant labor
  19. Americans and Russians see the world differently, and that's hurting Syrians
  20. Alcoholism research: A virus could manipulate neurons to reduce the desire to drink
  21. Why sports fans need villains
  22. Is Clinton or Trump a better choice for parents?
  23. What does Trump have to do with the Hindu sacred syllable, om?
  24. As incomes rise in China, so does concern about pollution
  25. Why requiring low-nicotine cigarettes is still ill-advised
  26. Want to help free trade's losers? Make 'adjustment assistance' more than just burial insurance
  27. What wind, currents and geography tell us about how people first settled Oceania
  28. Why companies like Wells Fargo ignore their whistleblowers – at their peril
  29. Could subscriptions for academic journals go the way of pay phones?
  30. What Myanmar's bizarre capital tells us about the future of travel
  31. Why it's your job to get a flu shot – and call in sick if you do get the flu
  32. With the familiar Cavendish banana in danger, can science help it survive?
  33. What Ted Nugent and Demi Lovato can do for Trump and Clinton
  34. Fact-checking Clinton and Trump is not enough
  35. The Conversation US turns two
  36. The 'legitimation' crisis in the US: Why have Americans lost trust in government?
  37. How should we teach our kids to use digital media?
  38. Do programs to help doctors with substance abuse treat them fairly?
  39. How media outlets from around the world are reacting to the presidential campaign
  40. Donald Trump and the rise of white identity in politics
  41. Corporate America’s old boys’ club is dead – and that’s why Big Business couldn’t stop Trump
  42. The next frontier in medical sensing: Threads coated in nanomaterials
  43. Religious feelings could sway the vote in 2016 election
  44. Moving toward computing at the speed of thought
  45. Could the candidates truly fix – or nix – Obamacare? Six essential reads
  46. How was French cuisine toppled as the king of fine dining?
  47. From voting to writing a will: The simple power of making a plan
  48. Final presidential debate is a tactical victory for Clinton
  49. How Western companies can succeed in China
  50. How the Ouija board got its sinister reputation