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The Conversation

Nat King Cole’s often overlooked role in the Civil Rights Movement

  • Written by Donna M. Cox, Professor of Music, University of Dayton
imageNat King Cole performs in Copenhagen, Denmark, in April 1960.Ebbe Wrae/JP Jazz Archive/Getty Images

Six decades after Nat King Cole’s death in 1965, his music is still some of the most played in the world, and his celebrity transcends generational and racial divides. His smooth voice, captivating piano skills and enduring charisma earned him...

Read more: Nat King Cole’s often overlooked role in the Civil Rights Movement

Philly’s Chinatown has a rich tradition of activism – the Sixers arena fight was just one of many to preserve the neighborhood

  • Written by Vivian Truong, Assistant Professor of History, Swarthmore College
imageSave Chinatown protesters take to the streets on Sept. 7, 2024.Zachary Kreines, CC BY-NC-ND

Visitors commonly view Philadelphia’s Chinatown as a place to eat Chinese food and appreciate Chinese culture. But for longtime members of the Chinatown community, the neighborhood – home to over over 5,000 residents – is also defined by...

Read more: Philly’s Chinatown has a rich tradition of activism – the Sixers arena fight was just one of many...

How California can rebuild safer, more resilient cities after wildfires without pricing out workers

  • Written by Nichole Wissman, Assistant Professor of Management, University of San Diego
imageAfter the fires, what comes next for residents?Zoe Meyers/AFP via Getty Images

The dramatic images of wealthy neighborhoods burning during the January 2025 Los Angeles wildfires captured global attention, but the damage was much more widespread. Many working-class families lost their homes, businesses and jobs. In all, more than 16,000 structures &n...

Read more: How California can rebuild safer, more resilient cities after wildfires without pricing out workers

How Oscar-nominated screenwriters attempt to craft authentic dialogue, dialects and accents

  • Written by Chris C. Palmer, Professor of English, Kennesaw State University
imageEditors deployed AI to make the Hungarian dialogue in 'The Brutalist' sound more authentic.A24/TNS

The 2025 slate of Oscar nominees recognizes many writers, directors and actors whose scripts and performances don’t necessarily reflect their own cultural and linguistic backgrounds.

Greg Kwedar and Clint Bentley, both white, co-wrote “Sing...

Read more: How Oscar-nominated screenwriters attempt to craft authentic dialogue, dialects and accents

Cutting funding for science can have consequences for the economy, US technological competitiveness

  • Written by Chris Impey, University Distinguished Professor of Astronomy, University of Arizona
imageNational Institutes of Health indirect costs, which are under the knife, go toward managing laboratories and facilities. Fei Yang/Moment via Getty Images

America has already lost its global competitive edge in science, and funding cuts proposed in early 2025 may further a precipitous decline.

Proposed cuts to the federal agencies that fund...

Read more: Cutting funding for science can have consequences for the economy, US technological competitiveness

Trump has purged the Kennedy Center’s board, which in turn made him its chair – why does that matter?

  • Written by E. Andrew Taylor, Associate Professor and Director of Arts Management, American University
imageFormer Kennedy Center President Deborah Rutter walks by The Reach, a major expansion of the performing arts center completed during her tenure.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

President Donald Trump dismissed half the appointed trustees of the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts’ board on Feb. 12, 2025. The remaining board members, most...

Read more: Trump has purged the Kennedy Center’s board, which in turn made him its chair – why does that...

Why is water different colors in different places?

  • Written by Courtney Di Vittorio, Assistant Professor of Engineering, Wake Forest University
imageCrater Lake in Oregon looks brilliant blue because its water comes from melting snow and is extremely pure.CST Tami Beduhn, NOAA Ship Fairweather/Flickr, CC BY

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


Why is water different colors in...

Read more: Why is water different colors in different places?

Why do skiers sunburn so easily on the slopes? A snow scientist explains

  • Written by Steven R. Fassnacht, Professor of Snow Hydrology, Colorado State University
imageSkiers can sunburn easily for reasons that have nothing to do with the mountain's elevation.Matt Bird/Stone via Getty Images

It’s extremely easy to get sunburned while you’re skiing and snowboarding in the mountains, but have you ever wondered why?

While it’s true that you’re slightly closer to the Sun when you’re high...

Read more: Why do skiers sunburn so easily on the slopes? A snow scientist explains

Who are Ismaili Muslims and how do their beliefs relate to the Aga Khan’s work?

  • Written by Shariq Siddiqui, Assistant Professor of Philanthropic Studies, Indiana University
imagePrince Karim Aga Khan at an event on Oct. 2, 2019, in London.Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

Prince Karim Aga Khan, who died on Feb. 4, 2025, served as the religious leader of Ismaili Muslims around the world since being appointed as the 49th hereditary imam in 1957. He came to be known around the world for his enormous work on global development...

Read more: Who are Ismaili Muslims and how do their beliefs relate to the Aga Khan’s work?

Evolving intelligent life took billions of years − but it may not have been as unlikely as many scientists predicted

  • Written by Daniel Brady Mills, Postdoctoral Fellow in Geomicrobiology, Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich
imageThe Sun's distance from Earth allows it to be habitable for life.DrPixel/Moment via Getty Images

A popular model of evolution concludes that it was incredibly unlikely for humanity to evolve on Earth, and that extraterrestrial intelligence is vanishingly rare.

But as experts on the entangled history of life and our planet, we propose that the...

Read more: Evolving intelligent life took billions of years − but it may not have been as unlikely as many...

More Articles ...

  1. Congress, not the president, decides on government spending − a constitutional law professor explains how the ‘power of the purse’ works
  2. How Americans really feel about deporting immigrants – 3 charts explain the conflicting headlines from recent polls
  3. How to find climate data and science the Trump administration doesn’t want you to see
  4. Nonprofits get more donations when they vary their Facebook fundraising messages − new research
  5. Parents can soon use QR codes to reveal heavy metal content in baby food
  6. ‘Emilia Pérez’ was nominated for 13 Oscars. Why do so many people hate it?
  7. ‘For You’: What to know about news on TikTok
  8. Enzymes are the engines of life − machine learning tools could help scientists design new ones to tackle disease and climate change
  9. 60 years of progress in expanding rights is being rolled back by Trump − a pattern that’s all too familiar in US history
  10. From Jewish summer camp to gospel to Chabad, Bob Dylan’s faith doesn’t fit in a box − but he’s long had a connection to Israel
  11. Can the president really kill off the penny – and should he?
  12. Syria’s mass graves: Accounting for the dead and disappeared is crucial for the nation to heal
  13. Trump and Maduro refresh a complex relationship governed by self-interest and tainted by Venezuela election fraud
  14. Inflation is heating up again, putting pressure on Trump to cool it on tariffs
  15. How Valentine’s Day was transformed by the Industrial Revolution and ‘manufactured intimacy’
  16. Why federal courts are unlikely to save democracy from Trump’s and Musk’s attacks
  17. How much does scientific progress cost? Without government dollars for research infrastructure, breakthroughs become improbable
  18. In spite of anti-DEI pressures, top corporations continued to diversify in 2024: new research
  19. China flexes its media muscle in Africa – encouraging positive headlines as part of a soft power agenda
  20. Repatriation to Indigenous groups is more than law, it’s human rights − an archaeologist describes the day that lesson hit home
  21. Teenagers turning to AI companions are redefining love as easy, unconditional and always there
  22. Address science misinformation not by repeating the facts, but by building conversation and community
  23. Helping teachers learn what works in the classroom − and what doesn’t − will get a lot harder without the Department of Education’s Institute of Education Sciences
  24. Even as polarization surges, Americans believe they live in a compassionate country
  25. The New Yorker turns 100 − how a poker game pipe dream became a publishing powerhouse
  26. Decluttering can be stressful − a clinical psychologist explains how personal values can make it easier
  27. Why are migrants dying trying to cross into the US? These are the 3 main risks they face
  28. NOAA’s vast public weather data powers the local forecasts on your phone and TV – a private company alone couldn’t match it
  29. Legal fight against AI-generated child pornography is complicated – a legal scholar explains why, and how the law could catch up
  30. Mirror life is a scientific fantasy leading to a dangerous reality − a synthetic biologist explains how mirror bacteria could conquer life on Earth
  31. Rural Americans don’t live as long as those in cities − new research
  32. Whether Christians should prioritize care for migrants as much as for fellow citizens has been debated for centuries
  33. How opioid deaths tripled in Philly over a decade − and what may be behind a recent downturn
  34. Art and science illuminate the same subtle proportions in tree branches
  35. If FEMA didn’t exist, could states handle the disaster response alone?
  36. Here’s how researchers are helping AIs get their facts straight
  37. Poor sleep and addiction go hand in hand − understanding how could lead to new treatments for opioid use disorder
  38. A boycott campaign fuels tension between Black shoppers and Black-owned brands – evoking the long struggle for ‘consumer citizenship’
  39. Why the price of your favorite chocolate will continue to rise
  40. Teen girls are facing an increased risk of suicide − and stress related to sexual identity might be contributing to it
  41. Are animals smart? From dolphin language to toolmaking crows, lots of species have obvious intelligence
  42. How the human neck became a locus of power, beauty and frailty
  43. Russia’s shrinking world: The war in Ukraine and Moscow’s global reach
  44. 5 premium online research tools all Philly students can use for free
  45. Gut-wrenching love: What a fresh look at the ‘Good Samaritan’ story says for ethics today
  46. US sovereign wealth fund: A feasible idea to invest strategically, or a giant opportunity for waste?
  47. Efficiency − or empire? How Elon Musk’s hostile takeover could end government as we know it
  48. Seed oils are toxic, says Robert F. Kennedy Jr. – but it’s not so simple
  49. Map wars in the Middle East: How cartographers charted and helped shape a regional conflict
  50. Why does Trump want to abolish the Education Department? An anthropologist who studies MAGA explains 4 reasons