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The Conversation

The pull of energy markets – and legal challenges – will blunt plans to roll back EPA carbon rules

  • Written by Hari Osofsky, Dean, Distinguished Professor of Law, Professor of International Affairs, Professor of Geography, Pennsylvania State University
imageGrid operators set the prices for energy markets and are structured to take the lowest prices – a disadvantage for coal and nuclear power.CC BY

On Oct. 10, EPA Administrator Scott Pruitt formally announced a repeal of the Clean Power Plan, regulation intended to curb greenhouse gas emissions from existing coal- and natural gas-fired power...

Read more: The pull of energy markets – and legal challenges – will blunt plans to roll back EPA carbon rules

Under the Trump administration, US airstrikes are killing more civilians

  • Written by Steven Feldstein, Frank and Bethine Church Chair of Public Affairs & Associate Professor, School of Public Service, Boise State University
imageSmoke from an airstrike rises in the background as a man flees during fighting between Iraqi special forces and IS militants in Mosul, Iraq, on May 17, 2017. AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo

When President Donald Trump took office in January, it was unclear whether the bombast from his campaign would translate into an aggressive new strategy against...

Read more: Under the Trump administration, US airstrikes are killing more civilians

Sexual harassment: 5 essential reads

  • Written by Danielle Douez, Associate Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation
imageHarvey Weinstein in 2013.Chris Pizzello/Invision/APimage

Editor’s note: On Friday, Oct. 13, “Third Rail with OZY” will ask: Is sexual harassment inevitable in the workplace?

This roundup of stories from The Conversation archive explores sexual harassment.


1. Delayed disclosures

More women are stepping forward to share their experiences of...

Read more: Sexual harassment: 5 essential reads

Sent to Haiti to keep the peace, departing UN troops leave a damaged nation in their wake

  • Written by Siobhán Wills, Professor of Law, University of Ulster

On Oct. 15, 2017, the United Nations will withdraw its peacekeeping troops from Haiti, ending its 13-year mission there.

One might expect mixed feelings about the soldiers’ departure. After all, since the arrival of the U.N. Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH) in June 2004, after former President Jean-Bertrande Aristide was forced out...

Read more: Sent to Haiti to keep the peace, departing UN troops leave a damaged nation in their wake

Until youth soccer is fixed, US men's national team is destined to fail

  • Written by Rick Eckstein, Professor of Sociology, Villanova University
imageDefender Matt Besler sits on the field after losing to Trinidad and Tobago in a 2018 World Cup qualifying match.Rebecca Blackwell/AP Photo

David beating Goliath is very exciting – unless you’re a fan of Goliath.

The United States has 330 million people and a massive youth soccer system, yet its men’s national soccer team just got...

Read more: Until youth soccer is fixed, US men's national team is destined to fail

Why Trump's executive order may compound the health insurance industry's problems

  • Written by J.B. Silvers, Professor of Health Finance, Weatherhead School of Management & School of Medicine, Case Western Reserve University
imageUnraveling Obamacare will be easier than fixing the nation's insurance problems. AP Photo/Evan Vucci

President Donald Trump has issued the first of what promises to be a series of health insurance executive orders aimed at dismantling the Affordable Care Act.

It instructs the government to essentially exempt small businesses and potentially...

Read more: Why Trump's executive order may compound the health insurance industry's problems

How to combat racial bias: Start in childhood

  • Written by Gail Heyman, Professor of Psychology, University of California, San Diego
imageComputer training can decrease children's biases.Jeff Inglis, CC BY-ND

Racial bias can seem like an intractable problem. Psychologists and other social scientists have had difficulty finding effective ways to counter it – even among people who say they support a fairer, more egalitarian society. One likely reason for the difficulty is that...

Read more: How to combat racial bias: Start in childhood

Trump administration's zeal to peel back regulations is leading us to another era of robber barons

  • Written by Jeremi Suri, Professor of History and Public Affairs, Mack Brown Distinguished Chair, University of Texas at Austin
imageEPA Administrator Scott Pruitt is an unabashed ally of the fossil fuels – industry his agency is supposed to regulate. AP Photo/Gene J. Puskar

The Trump administration has a clear economic objective: deregulate. Loosening regulations on industries, the White House believes, will lead to faster growth and more jobs. This is the stated reason f...

Read more: Trump administration's zeal to peel back regulations is leading us to another era of robber barons

In Mexico, undocumented migrants risk deportation to aid earthquake victims

  • Written by Luis Gómez Romero, Senior Lecturer in Human Rights, Constitutional Law and Legal Theory, University of Wollongong
imageUndocumented migrants are among those helping to rebuild the hardest-hit areas of Oaxaca state, where federal aid has been slow to trickle down.Presidencia de la República Mexicana CC-by-2.0, CC BY-SA

After two earthquakes that left more than 450 dead and 150,000 houses damaged, my home country of Mexico faces huge challenges in recovery.

Acc...

Read more: In Mexico, undocumented migrants risk deportation to aid earthquake victims

Marketing a devastated Puerto Rico should not be the priority

  • Written by Carlos A Suárez Carrasquillo, Lecturer in Political Science, University of Florida

President Donald Trump’s recent visit to Puerto Rico in the aftermath of Hurricane Maria added one more moment of infamy to Puerto Rico’s 119 years as a colonial territory.

Trump was taken to Muñoz Rivera, a middle-class neighborhood in Guaynabo. Most homes there are made of concrete and saw little impact from Hurricane Maria....

Read more: Marketing a devastated Puerto Rico should not be the priority

More Articles ...

  1. In Las Vegas, excess and fantasy bleed into tragedy
  2. How closing the door on the estate tax could reduce American giving
  3. Can you be hacked by the world around you?
  4. How a growing Christian movement is seeking to change America
  5. How to ensure the fourth industrial revolution is 'Made in the USA'
  6. Do people like government 'nudges'? Study says: Yes
  7. How Obamacare has helped poor cancer patients
  8. Marie Curie and her X-ray vehicles' contribution to World War I battlefield medicine
  9. Coastal protection on the edge: The challenge of preserving California's legacy
  10. Gentrification? Bring it
  11. In Latin America, is there a link between abortion rights and democracy?
  12. Trump's policies will harm coal-dependent communities instead of helping them
  13. What hundreds of American public libraries owe to Carnegie's disdain for inherited wealth
  14. How the stoicism of Roman philosophers can help us deal with depression
  15. Nobody reads privacy policies – here's how to fix that
  16. Why having the sex talk early and often with your kids is good for them
  17. How the US government created and coddled the gun industry
  18. Economist who helped behavioral 'nudges' go mainstream wins Nobel
  19. Why would the Trump administration ban travel from Chad?
  20. Why Rick Perry's proposed subsidies for coal fail Economics 101
  21. For Native Americans, a river is more than a 'person,' it is also a sacred place
  22. Indigenous people invented the so-called 'American Dream'
  23. What makes American society so violent? 4 essential reads
  24. The 'inevitable sadness' of Kazuo Ishiguro's fiction
  25. How Columbus, of all people, became a national symbol
  26. Why the Nobel Peace Prize brings little peace
  27. Bundy trial embodies everything dividing America today
  28. Are self-driving cars the future of mobility for disabled people?
  29. Urban noise pollution is worst in poor and minority neighborhoods and segregated cities
  30. Blade Runner's chillingly prescient vision of the future
  31. Knowing the signs of Lewy body dementia may help speed diagnosis
  32. Should Uncle Sam 'send in the Marines' after hurricanes?
  33. Catalonia's referendum unmasks authoritarianism in Spain
  34. The opioid epidemic in 6 charts
  35. How the Chinese cyberthreat has evolved
  36. How 'Germany's Hugh Hefner' created an entirely different sort of sex empire
  37. Chilled proteins and 3-D images: The cryo-electron microscopy technology that just won a Nobel Prize
  38. Do tax cuts stimulate the economy more than spending?
  39. The enduring power of print for learning in a digital world
  40. I've spent years looking at what was actually in Playboy, and it wasn't just objectification of women
  41. How inherited fitness may affect breast cancer risk
  42. Why people around the world fear climate change more than Americans do
  43. How fair is it for just three people to receive the Nobel Prize in physics?
  44. After a disaster, contaminated floodwater can pose a threat for months to come
  45. Scientists join forces to save Puerto Rico's 'Monkey Island'
  46. Governments, car companies must resolve their competing goals for self-driving cars
  47. How dangerous people get their weapons in America
  48. Nobel winners identified molecular ‘cogs’ in the biological clocks that control our circadian rhythms
  49. When gun control makes a difference: 4 essential reads
  50. How to talk to your kids about opioids