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The Conversation

The behind-the-scenes people and organizations connecting science and decision-making

  • Written by Stephen Posner, Director of Policy, University of Vermont
imageListening to science is a lot easier for politicians when behind-the-scenes intermediaries are there to help.Morsa Images/DigitalVision via Getty Images

The role of science in society has never been more important. Scientific perspectives are critical for understanding complex issues such as the COVID-19 pandemic, climate change, access to higher...

Read more: The behind-the-scenes people and organizations connecting science and decision-making

Ransomware, data breach, cyberattack: What do they have to do with your personal information, and how worried should you be?

  • Written by Merrill Warkentin, James J. Rouse Endowed Professor of Information Systems, Mississippi State University
imageCredit bureau Equifax announced in 2017 that the personal information of 143 million Americans – about three-quarters of all adults – had been exposed in a major data breach.AP Photo/Mike Stewart

The headlines are filled with news about ransomware attacks tying up organizations large and small, data breaches at major brand-name...

Read more: Ransomware, data breach, cyberattack: What do they have to do with your personal information, and...

How palm oil became the world's most hated, most used fat source

  • Written by Jonathan E. Robins, Associate Professor of Global History, Michigan Technological University
imageOil palm fruit in North Aceh, Indonesia.Fachrul Reza / Barcroft Media via Getty Images

Palm oil is everywhere today: in food, soap, lipstick, even newspaper ink. It’s been called the world’s most hated crop because of its association with deforestation in Southeast Asia. But despite boycott campaigns, the world uses more palm oil than...

Read more: How palm oil became the world's most hated, most used fat source

Why choosing the next dalai lama will be a religious – as well as a political – issue

  • Written by Brooke Schedneck, Assistant Professor of Religious Studies, Rhodes College
imageThe current dalai lama was enthroned when he was about 4 years old.AP Photo/Antonio Calanni

The 14th Dalai Lama, Tenzin Gyatso, the spiritual leader of Tibet, is turning 86 on July 6, 2021. With his advancing age, the question of who will succeed him has become more pressing.

One of the most recognizable faces of Buddhism, the dalai lama is an...

Read more: Why choosing the next dalai lama will be a religious – as well as a political – issue

How the billions MacKenzie Scott is giving to colleges attended by students of color will help everyone in America

  • Written by Ivory A. Toldson, Professor of Counseling Psychology, Howard University
imageScott is giving dozens of predominantly nonwhite schools their biggest donations ever, including Chaffey College in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif.Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images

When billionaire philanthropist MacKenzie Scott announced her third round of charitable gifts in June 2021, she said she was giving US$2.7 billion to 286...

Read more: How the billions MacKenzie Scott is giving to colleges attended by students of color will help...

Gifted education programs don't benefit Black students like they do white students

  • Written by Christopher Redding, Assistant Professor of Educational Leadership, University of Florida
imageAffluent students also benefited more from gifted programs compared to students from low-income backgrounds.SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Participating in a gifted and talented program improved high-ability students’ reading and math achievement, on average,...

Read more: Gifted education programs don't benefit Black students like they do white students

'Wrong number? Let's chat' Maasai herders in East Africa use misdials to make connections

  • Written by Timothy D. Baird, Associate Professor of Geography, Virginia Tech
imageA Maasai man receives a call on his mobile phone.Timothy D. Baird/Virginia Tech, CC BY-ND

Sometimes wrong numbers work. On the East African savanna, Maasai herders can form important new social connections when they misdial their mobile phones, our new study of these communities found. Maasai have traditionally lived in relatively independent,...

Read more: 'Wrong number? Let's chat' Maasai herders in East Africa use misdials to make connections

Yellowstone is losing its snow as the climate warms, and that means widespread problems for water and wildlife

  • Written by Bryan Shuman, Professor of Paleoclimatology and Paleoecology, University of Wyoming
imageSnow melts near the Continental Divide in the Bridger Wilderness Area in Wyoming, part of the Greater Yellowstone Area.Bryan Shuman/University of Wyoming, CC BY-ND

When you picture Yellowstone National Park and its neighbor, Grand Teton, the snowcapped peaks and Old Faithful Geyser almost certainly come to mind. Climate change threatens all of...

Read more: Yellowstone is losing its snow as the climate warms, and that means widespread problems for water...

Despite outrage, new state voting laws don't spell democracy's end – but there are some threats

  • Written by Derek T. Muller, Professor of Law, University of Iowa
imageWill new election laws being proposed and passed in states limit people's opportunity to vote? Sean Rayford/Getty Images

The sky is falling – that’s what you may believe about a rash of new election laws being introduced, largely by the GOP, in statehouses across the country. Alternatively, you may think these laws are absolutely...

Read more: Despite outrage, new state voting laws don't spell democracy's end – but there are some threats

How gay neighborhoods used the traumas of HIV to help American cities fight coronavirus

  • Written by Daniel Baldwin Hess, Professor of Urban and Regional Planning, University at Buffalo
imageHIV health and support groups offered COVID-19 testing and other community services during the pandemic. iStock / Getty Images Plus

Throughout the pandemic, local neighborhoods have played a critical and well-documented role providing the health and social services necessary for American communities and businesses to survive and recover from the...

Read more: How gay neighborhoods used the traumas of HIV to help American cities fight coronavirus

More Articles ...

  1. For flood-prone cities, seawalls raise as many questions as they answer
  2. Transgender medicine – what care looks like, who seeks it out and what's still unknown: 3 essential reads
  3. The FDA’s weak drug manufacturing oversight is a potentially deadly problem
  4. Flawed data led to findings of a connection between time spent on devices and mental health problems – new research
  5. How Vladimir Putin uses natural gas to exert Russian influence and punish his enemies
  6. Biden's goal to permanently boost support for families echoes a failed Nixon proposal from 50 years ago – will it take off this time?
  7. I have city kids make comic books to create a buzz about mosquitoes and ecology
  8. What is the religious exemption to Title IX and what's at stake in LGBTQ students' legal challenge
  9. Global herd immunity remains out of reach because of inequitable vaccine distribution – 99% of people in poor countries are unvaccinated
  10. 'Upcycling' promises to turn food waste into your next meal
  11. Explorer Robert Ballard's memoir finds shipwrecks and strange life forms in the ocean's darkest reaches
  12. White Gen X and millennial evangelicals are losing faith in the conservative culture wars
  13. The gas tax's tortured history shows how hard it is to fund new infrastructure
  14. US third parties can rein in the extremism of the two-party system
  15. Critical race theory sparks activism in students
  16. The surface of Venus is cracked and moves like ice floating on the ocean – likely due to tectonic activity
  17. What's behind the rising profile of transgender kids? 3 essential reads
  18. Why gain-of-function research matters
  19. As urban life resumes, can US cities avert gridlock?
  20. What's next for health care reform after the Supreme Court rejects ACA's most recent challenge
  21. Does outer space end – or go on forever?
  22. How to consume news while maintaining your sanity
  23. The dip in the US birthrate isn't a crisis, but the fall in immigration may be
  24. 'Managed retreat' done right can reinvent cities so they're better for everyone – and avoid harm from flooding, heat and fires
  25. This tiny minority of Iraqis follows an ancient Gnostic religion – and there's a chance they could be your neighbors too
  26. 4 ways to get more Black and Latino teachers in K-12 public schools
  27. Supreme Court unanimously upholds religious liberty over LGBTQ rights -- and nods to a bigger win for conservatives ahead
  28. Federal policy has failed to protect Indigenous women
  29. How Black writers and journalists have wielded punctuation in their activism
  30. Lighter pavement really does cool cities when it’s done right
  31. Academic tenure: What it is and why it matters
  32. Conservative hard-liner elected as Iran's next president – what that means for the West and the nuclear deal
  33. Too few women get to invent – that's a problem for women's health
  34. Young people are eager to have sex, but will post-pandemic hookups bring happiness or despair?
  35. A mix-and-match approach to COVID-19 vaccines could provide logistical and immunological benefits
  36. Being a pop star once meant baring skin – now, for artists like Billie Eilish and Demi Lovato, it's all about emotional stripping
  37. Millions are rejecting one of humanity's best weapons for saving lives: Vaccines
  38. Postal banking could provide free accounts to 21 million Americans who don't have access to a credit union or community bank
  39. What's a 100-year flood? A hydrologist explains
  40. What's the charitable deduction? An economist explains
  41. How Israel's missing constitution deepens divisions between Jews and with Arabs
  42. Nurturing dads raise emotionally intelligent kids – helping make society more respectful and equitable
  43. The first mobile phone call was 75 years ago – what it takes for technologies to go from breakthrough to big time
  44. Racial bias makes white Americans more likely to support wars in nonwhite foreign countries -- new study
  45. A court ruling on Shell's climate impact and votes against Exxon and Chevron add pressure, but it's the market that will drive oil giants to change
  46. Why nobody will ever agree on whether COVID lockdowns were worth it
  47. Biden's Supreme Court commission probably won't sway public opinion
  48. 5 ways MacKenzie Scott’s $8.5 billion commitment to social and economic justice is a model for other donors
  49. Faith still shapes morals and values even after people are 'done' with religion
  50. Smelling in stereo – the real reason snakes have flicking, forked tongues