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Posting on Facebook is helping nonprofits of all sizes raise money

  • Written by Abhishek Bhati, Assistant Professor of Political Science, Bowling Green State University
More and more fundraising happens online.karen roach/Shutterstock.com

Online giving, donations for charities made through websites and apps, is growing quickly. It rose 17% between 2016 and 2018 to over US$34 billion. Some 8.5% of all U.S. charitable donations, including grants from foundations and gifts from people and companies, are made through...

Read more: Posting on Facebook is helping nonprofits of all sizes raise money

Rural hospital closings reach crisis stage, leaving millions without nearby health care

  • Written by Jane Bolin, Professor of Health Policy + Management, Deputy Director of the Southwest Rural Health Research Center; Associate dean of research, College of Nursing, Texas A&M University
A welcome sign to Bristol, a small town that sits in Virginia and Tennessee, June 26, 2019. Bristol is trying to recruit doctors because the rural town is facing many of the same health care shortages of other rural towns.Sudhin Thanawala/AP Photo

Presidential candidates and other politicians have talked about the rural health crisis in the U.S.,...

Read more: Rural hospital closings reach crisis stage, leaving millions without nearby health care

Gut microbes can get you drunk and damage your liver

  • Written by Bill Sullivan, Professor of Pharmacology & Toxicology, Indiana University
Drinking alcohol isn't the only cause of high blood alcohol levels.nikamo

Imagine that you’re a police officer. You spot a car ahead that is swerving all over the road. You pull the driver over and she’s clearly intoxicated. With slurred speech, she swears that she hasn’t had a drop of alcohol all day. Would you believe her?

In 2016...

Read more: Gut microbes can get you drunk and damage your liver

Why I'm teaching kids science through the sport of rowing

  • Written by Elizabeth A. Barton, Associate Professor of Research, Wayne State University
The math behind the movement.Dmitrydesign/Shutterstock.com

I didn’t know what the world looked like at 5:00 a.m. until my son began rowing for the Detroit Boat Club Crew, the oldest continuous rowing program in North America.

The sight of young rowers slicing through the water in unison in narrow sculling boats, against the backdrop of dawn...

Read more: Why I'm teaching kids science through the sport of rowing

Local communities play outsized but overlooked role in global fisheries

  • Written by John Virdin, Director, Ocean Policy Program, Duke University
Fish for sale in a Dakar, Senegal.AP Photo/Schalk van Zuydam

Flying along the coast in Senegal, it’s impossible not to notice thousands of dots below in the water. These are large, planked fishing canoes, the product of centuries of design and tradition, and a vital part of the local economy.

When the fishing crews come home, Senegalese beaches...

Read more: Local communities play outsized but overlooked role in global fisheries

Curious Kids: Can people colonize Mars?

  • Written by Anita Sengupta, Adjunct Research Associate Professor of Astronautics, University of Southern California
In the future, people may be able to go to Mars.Gorodenkoff/Shutterstock.com

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.


Can we colonize Mars? – Clara, age 9, Newton, Massachusetts


In all likelihood, the first Martian will be a...

Read more: Curious Kids: Can people colonize Mars?

Intelligence whistleblowers often pay a severe price

  • Written by Jennifer M. Pacella, Assistant Professor of Business Law and Ethics, Indiana University

Spies and the White House have a history of running wild without congressional oversight

  • Written by Charles Tiefer, Professor of Law, University of Baltimore
Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani in late November 2016, after Trump won the presidential election. AP/Carolyn Kaster

At the heart of the current crisis over President Donald Trump’s dealings with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy is an intelligence whistleblower whose information has finally made it into public view.

The...

Read more: Spies and the White House have a history of running wild without congressional oversight

Beautiful people don't always win in the workplace

  • Written by Chun Zhang, Assistant Professor of Marketing, University of Dayton
Consumers react differently to beautiful service employees.Ruben M Ramos/Shutterstock.com

Beautiful people tend to have a lot more luck in the work world.

Research has shown people deemed attractive get paid more, receive better job evaluations and are generally more employable. It’s even been shown that good-looking CEOs bring better stock...

Read more: Beautiful people don't always win in the workplace

Rising seas threaten hundreds of Native American heritage sites along Florida's Gulf Coast

  • Written by Jayur Mehta, Assistant Professor of Anthropology, Florida State University
Native American burial mound at Lake Jackson Mounds State Park, north of Tallahassee, Fla.Ebaybe/Wikipedia, CC BY-SA

Native North Americans first arrived in Florida approximately 14,550 years ago. Evidence for these stone-tool-wielding, megafauna-hunting peoples can be found at the bottom of numerous limestone freshwater sinkholes in...

Read more: Rising seas threaten hundreds of Native American heritage sites along Florida's Gulf Coast

More Articles ...

  1. Why the flu shot cannot give you the flu (and why you should get one now)
  2. Climate change is really about prosperity, peace, public health and posterity – not saving the environment
  3. Arrests of 6-year-olds shows the perils of putting police in primary schools
  4. Why cheaper drugs from Canada likely won't cure what ails US
  5. Founders: Removal from office is not the only purpose of impeachment
  6. Would ousting Trump rebuild the country's faith in government? Lessons from Latin America
  7. Recycling rates could rise significantly with this simple tweak
  8. The history of the cross and its many meanings over the centuries
  9. Curious Kids: Why do old people hate new music?
  10. Why are private prisons controversial? 3 questions answered
  11. California polluters may soon buy carbon “offsets” from the Amazon — is that ethical?
  12. Trump, Ukraine and a whistleblower: Ever since 1796, Congress has struggled to keep presidents in check
  13. Another grim climate report on oceans – what will it take to address the compounding problems?
  14. Could climate change fuel the rise of right-wing nationalism?
  15. Universal ethical truths are at the core of Jewish High Holy Days
  16. What Amazon, Walmart employees risk when they use the workplace for activism
  17. Sneaky lions in Zambia are moving across areas thought uninhabitable for them
  18. US citizenship applications are backlogged, prolonging the wait for civil and voting rights
  19. Trump scorns United Nations as tensions with Iran flare over Saudi oil attacks
  20. France forgets own golden age of medical marijuana
  21. Christianity at the Supreme Court: From majority power to minority rights
  22. California law to restrict medical vaccine exemptions raises thorny questions over control
  23. Fidel's Cuba is long gone
  24. How fires weaken Amazon rainforests' ability to bounce back
  25. Repealing the Clean Water Rule will swamp the Trump administration in wetland litigation
  26. What the Jeffrey Epstein case reveals about female sex offenders
  27. What Trump's asylum ban will mean for the thousands waiting at the US-Mexico border
  28. Why does the CDC want us to 'Think Fungus'?
  29. Gas shortages paralyze Haiti, triggering protests against failing economy and dysfunctional politics
  30. Climate change created today's large crocodiles
  31. 3 tips for Justin Trudeau on how to say 'I'm sorry'
  32. Why the United Auto Workers GM strike is headed for failure
  33. Mississippi: African American voters sue over election law rooted in the state's racist past
  34. Curious Kids: What was the first computer?
  35. Attacks on Saudi oil – why didn't prices go crazy?
  36. There's evidence that climate activism could be swaying public opinion in the US
  37. 4 reasons why we'll never see another show like 'Friends'
  38. An origin story for the queer community
  39. 'Always sticking to your convictions' sounds like a good thing – but it isn't
  40. What if college athletes got paid? 3 questions answered
  41. It’s high time someone studied marijuana taxes – so we did
  42. What is the cryosphere? Hint: It's vital to farming, fishing and skiing
  43. Marriage could be good for your health – unless you're bisexual
  44. An Alzheimer's study used electrostimulation to evoke vivid memories – here's what it could mean
  45. Partisan divide creates different Americas, separate lives
  46. Textbook merger could create more problems than just higher prices
  47. From smoking to vaping: Why do we abuse our lungs?
  48. A digital archaeologist helps inaccessible collections be seen
  49. We're increasingly bombarded with choices – and it's stressing us out
  50. Fed’s rate cut signals a recession may be ahead – and it may not have enough ammunition to fight it