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Why sports fans need villains

  • Written by Vassilis Dalakas, Professor of Marketing, California State University San Marcos

As the new NBA season begins, the Golden State Warriors find themselves in an unfamiliar role: villain.

After the Warriors drafted Stephen Curry from unheralded Davidson College in 2009, fans across the country became enamored with his exciting style of play. Through the years, the team added players to complement Curry’s scoring prowess...

Read more: Why sports fans need villains

Is Clinton or Trump a better choice for parents?

  • Written by Renee Cramer, Professor of Law, Politics and Society, Drake University

When asked, at the close of the second presidential debate, to say something nice about her opponent, Hillary Clinton responded by complimenting Donald Trump’s children. They are, she said, “able and devoted.”

Parenting has been a central theme of this election cycle. As part of an effort to render Clinton more vibrantly human,...

Read more: Is Clinton or Trump a better choice for parents?

What does Trump have to do with the Hindu sacred syllable, om?

  • Written by Finnian M.M. Gerety, Visiting Assistant Professor, Religious Studies, Brown University
imageA poster of Hindus for Trump, which shows Donald Trump in a 'yogi' pose.HIndus for Trump

Republican nominee Donald Trump was recently invited to a fundraising event organized by a conservative group of Hindu Americans, the Republican Hindu Coalition. A poster from the event, which describes the group as “Hindus for Trump,” portrays the...

Read more: What does Trump have to do with the Hindu sacred syllable, om?

As incomes rise in China, so does concern about pollution

  • Written by Matthew Kahn, Professor of Economics, University of Southern California – Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

Over the last 40 years, hundreds of millions of people in China have escaped poverty as this enormous nation urbanized and became a manufacturing powerhouse fueled by cheap coal and cheap labor. But this development strategy has imposed enormous environmental costs on the Chinese people. Air pollution levels have soared, rural areas face severe...

Read more: As incomes rise in China, so does concern about pollution

Why requiring low-nicotine cigarettes is still ill-advised

  • Written by Lynn T. Kozlowski, Professor, Department of Community Health and Health Behavior, University at Buffalo, The State University of New York
imageWill a low-nicotine cigarette work for people who love to smoke?From www.shutterstock.com

Global policymakers will soon consider a policy of requiring that only reduced-nicotine cigarettes can be manufactured or sold. This may sound good, but as someone who has studied tobacco for decades, I believe it is premature to deploy this as a tool to...

Read more: Why requiring low-nicotine cigarettes is still ill-advised

Want to help free trade's losers? Make 'adjustment assistance' more than just burial insurance

  • Written by Marina v. N. Whitman, Professor of Business Administration and Public Policy, University of Michigan

If there’s one thing that nearly all economists agree on, it’s that getting rid of trade restrictions is generally good for a country’s economy.

Doing so leads to a higher national income, faster economic growth, higher productivity and more competition and innovation. Freer trade also tends to lower prices and improve the...

Read more: Want to help free trade's losers? Make 'adjustment assistance' more than just burial insurance

What wind, currents and geography tell us about how people first settled Oceania

  • Written by Alvaro Montenegro, Assistant Professor of Geography and Director Atmospheric Sciences Program, The Ohio State University
imageLooks like paradise – but how did the first people get there?Global Environment Facility, CC BY-NC-ND

Just look at a map of Remote Oceania – the region of the Pacific that contains Hawaii, New Zealand, Samoa, French Polynesia and Micronesia – and it’s hard not to wonder how people originally settled on these islands....

Read more: What wind, currents and geography tell us about how people first settled Oceania

Why companies like Wells Fargo ignore their whistleblowers – at their peril

  • Written by Elizabeth C. Tippett, Assistant Professor, School of Law, University of Oregon

Enron. Worldcom. The Madoff scandal. The mortgage meltdown. Now Wells Fargo.

High-profile corporate frauds like these all seem to follow the same pattern. First the misconduct is discovered, and then we learn about all of the whistleblowers who tried to stop the fraud much earlier. Congress then tries to enhance whistleblower protections, with...

Read more: Why companies like Wells Fargo ignore their whistleblowers – at their peril

Could subscriptions for academic journals go the way of pay phones?

  • Written by Donald A. Barclay, Deputy University Librarian, University of California, Merced
imageShould the public pay to read research?Barry Silver, CC BY

The cost of academic journals has increased steeply over the past few decades and continues to climb. Academic libraries, already caught in an economic squeeze, are finding it difficult to acquire new journal subscriptions or, in the worst case, are even canceling existing subscriptions.

Eit...

Read more: Could subscriptions for academic journals go the way of pay phones?

What Myanmar's bizarre capital tells us about the future of travel

  • Written by David Bockino, Assistant Professor of Communication, Elon University

Naypyidaw, Myanmar, is one of the strangest capital cities in the world. The city, only a decade old, is a sprawling maze of 20-lane highways, government compounds and pastel condominiums.

One visitor described it as “an eerie picture of post-apocalypse suburban America.” Another was more blunt, calling it “the most awful place...

Read more: What Myanmar's bizarre capital tells us about the future of travel

More Articles ...

  1. Why it's your job to get a flu shot – and call in sick if you do get the flu
  2. With the familiar Cavendish banana in danger, can science help it survive?
  3. What Ted Nugent and Demi Lovato can do for Trump and Clinton
  4. Fact-checking Clinton and Trump is not enough
  5. The Conversation US turns two
  6. The 'legitimation' crisis in the US: Why have Americans lost trust in government?
  7. How should we teach our kids to use digital media?
  8. Do programs to help doctors with substance abuse treat them fairly?
  9. How media outlets from around the world are reacting to the presidential campaign
  10. Donald Trump and the rise of white identity in politics
  11. Corporate America’s old boys’ club is dead – and that’s why Big Business couldn’t stop Trump
  12. The next frontier in medical sensing: Threads coated in nanomaterials
  13. Religious feelings could sway the vote in 2016 election
  14. Moving toward computing at the speed of thought
  15. Could the candidates truly fix – or nix – Obamacare? Six essential reads
  16. How was French cuisine toppled as the king of fine dining?
  17. From voting to writing a will: The simple power of making a plan
  18. Final presidential debate is a tactical victory for Clinton
  19. How Western companies can succeed in China
  20. How the Ouija board got its sinister reputation
  21. What do we know about marijuana's medical benefits? Two experts explain the evidence
  22. How many genes does it take to make a person?
  23. Clinton says the 'clean energy economy' will create millions of jobs. Can it?
  24. America's Nobel success is the story of immigrants
  25. Four female scholars suggest questions for the final presidential debate
  26. Securing the voting process: Four essential reads
  27. How does Obama's use of unilateral powers compare to other presidents?
  28. How sexual partner abuse has changed with social media
  29. What the presidential candidates' data can tell us about Trump and Clinton
  30. Why is the US Green Party so irrelevant?
  31. Digital health devices are great, but their prices are widening the health gap
  32. How to involve more women and girls in engineering
  33. Why do science issues seem to divide us along party lines?
  34. Why inequality is the most important economic challenge facing the next president
  35. Brexit and Trump are bad for our health
  36. Evangelical Christians are on the left too
  37. Why newspaper endorsements might matter more in this election
  38. Thousands of people didn't evacuate before Hurricane Matthew. Why not?
  39. No, Bob Dylan isn't the first lyricist to win the Nobel
  40. The Jewish vote may swing key undecided counties, study says
  41. One step toward making criminal justice less biased
  42. We could prevent millions of cancer deaths each year with knowledge we already have
  43. Dems and the GOP are miles apart on yet another issue: Public lands
  44. Straight girls do kiss on campus, but what about those who don't go to college?
  45. Do you buy a smartphone for its curves? Do you buy a car for its cup holders?
  46. What we can learn from Trump’s $916 million loss
  47. Reading, writing and mental health care: why schools need added services
  48. Weather forecasters can't manipulate hurricane warnings — here's why
  49. Should I grade-skip my gifted child?
  50. Latino voters respond to outreach, not insults