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Harvey and Irma present nearly perfect conditions for Zika-spreading mosquitoes

  • Written by Christine Crudo Blackburn, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, Scowcroft Institute of International Affairs, Bush School of Government and Public Service, Texas A&M University
image_Aedes Aegypti_ mosquitoes viewed through a microscope in Broward County, Florida, in June 2016. AP Photo/Lynne Sladky

Even as the floodwaters from Hurricanes Harvey and Irma begin to recede, significant but less obvious health threats remain. The standing water the storms have left behind will almost certainly cause an explosion of the mosquito...

Read more: Harvey and Irma present nearly perfect conditions for Zika-spreading mosquitoes

How affirmative action could cure cancer and heart disease

  • Written by Andrew Marks, Professor of Physiology, Columbia University Medical Center
imageKaylee Wedderburn-Pugh, a SPURS student, working to help find answers to Huntington's disease.Author provided. , CC BY-SA

Affirmative action programs are designed to provide access to high-quality higher education for underrepresented minorities, but the Trump administration is targeting these essential programs by directing resources toward...

Read more: How affirmative action could cure cancer and heart disease

How 'dreamers' and green card lottery winners strengthen the US economy

  • Written by Ethan Lewis, Associate Professor of Economics, Dartmouth College
imageThe DACA program's inherent diversity is what makes it a boon for the U.S. economy.AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais

While President Donald Trump and his fellow Republicans have long decried illegal immigration and proposed remedies like the wall and mass deportations, they have traditionally favored the legal kind, partly because their business...

Read more: How 'dreamers' and green card lottery winners strengthen the US economy

Roots of racism: 6 essential reads

  • Written by Emily Costello, Senior Editor, Politics + Society, The Conversation
imagewww.shutterstock.comimageOn Friday, Sept. 15, “Third Rail with OZY” will discuss racism in the United States.

These stories from The Conversation archive explore where racism came from and why it persists.


1. Going back to Europe

American University historian Ibram Kendi has traced the history of racist ideas in the U.S. back to the European...

Read more: Roots of racism: 6 essential reads

Seeds in space – how well can they survive harsh, non-Earth conditions?

  • Written by Gina Riggio, Ph.D. Student in Cell and Molecular Biology, University of Arkansas
imageSpend many months attached to the ISS and see how well you grow.NASA, CC BY

Will we someday colonize space? Will our children visit other planets? To achieve goals like these, we’ll need to crack one crucial challenge: how to feed ourselves for long periods away from Earth.

A trip to Mars would take months, and exploring the depths of the...

Read more: Seeds in space – how well can they survive harsh, non-Earth conditions?

'Jesus People' – a movement born from the 'Summer of Love'

  • Written by Larry Eskridge, Instructor in HIstory, Wheaton College (Illinois)
imageA crowd at Golden Gate Park in San Francisco celebrates day one of the 'Summer of Love.'AP Photo

This year marks the 50th anniversary of the “Summer of Love.” Popular culture remembers the tens of thousands of joyous young hippies that descended upon San Francisco’s Haight-Ashbury district to celebrate personal expression, drug...

Read more: 'Jesus People' – a movement born from the 'Summer of Love'

Hurricanes drive immigration to the US

  • Written by Dean Yang, Professor of Economics and Public Policy, University of Michigan

In the last few weeks, hurricanes Harvey, Irma and Katia have cut paths of destruction in the Caribbean, Mexico and the U.S.

While recovery and reconstruction will be an immense effort in Houston and Miami, it will likely be slower in poorer and smaller countries outside the U.S. There, many people suffering from the aftermath of these storms may...

Read more: Hurricanes drive immigration to the US

How solar power can protect the US military from threats to the electric grid

  • Written by Joshua M. Pearce, Professor, Michigan Technology University
imageUsing solar power could give the U.S. military some advantages – and more security. Diane Durden/U.S. Marine Corps

As the U.S. military increases its use of drones in surveillance and combat overseas, the danger posed by a threat back at home grows. Many drone flights are piloted by soldiers located in the U.S., even when the drones are...

Read more: How solar power can protect the US military from threats to the electric grid

Vietnam: Who was right about what went wrong – and why it matters in Afghanistan

  • Written by David Skidmore, Professor of Political Science, Drake University
imageSecretary of State Dean Rusk, President Lyndon Johnson and Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara. Yoichi Robert Okamoto/Wikipedia

The ghosts of the Vietnam War no doubt hovered over a recently assembled conclave of President Donald Trump’s advisers as they deliberated over the deteriorating situation in Afghanistan.

In the Vietnam era, as...

Read more: Vietnam: Who was right about what went wrong – and why it matters in Afghanistan

How Vietnam dramatically changed our views on soldiers, honor and war

  • Written by Richard Lachmann, Professor of Sociology, University at Albany, State University of New York
imageMarines help the wounded man to an evacuation helicopter near Van Tuong,1965. AP Photo/Peter Arnett

When Americans think of being at war, they might think of images of their fellow citizens suffering.

We count the dead and wounded. We follow veterans on their difficult journey of recovery from physical injuries and post-traumatic stress. We watch...

Read more: How Vietnam dramatically changed our views on soldiers, honor and war

More Articles ...

  1. Even when it's sitting in storage, coal threatens human health
  2. How Vietnam dramatically changed our views on honor and war
  3. Vietnam War: Who was right about what went wrong – and why it matters in Afghanistan
  4. During Vietnam, music spoke to both sides of a divided nation
  5. Can 'Game of Thrones' teach us about the meaning of life?
  6. During Vietnam War, music spoke to both sides of a divided nation
  7. Paris and Los Angeles bids to host Olympics expose deeper crisis at Olympic Games
  8. Irma price gouging highlights sad truth: Consumer fleecing is the new normal
  9. 5 things that have changed about FEMA since Katrina – and 5 that haven't
  10. Sleepy teenage brains need school to start later in the morning
  11. 5 ways to stretch your disaster relief dollars
  12. Should the US put power lines underground?
  13. Do hurricanes feel the effects of climate change?
  14. Want to fix America's health care? First, focus on food
  15. Is the new iPhone designed for cybersafety?
  16. How colleges can help students keep out of academic trouble
  17. American generosity after disasters: 4 questions answered
  18. What do hospitals do in a hurricane? Use their own emergency plans
  19. These four easy steps can make you a math whiz
  20. Are cryptocurrencies a dream come true for cyber-extortionists?
  21. Evolutionary geneticists spot natural selection happening now in people
  22. The mental health impact of major disasters like Harvey and Irma
  23. Why al-Qaida is still strong 16 years after 9/11
  24. At the beauty salon, Dominican-American women conflicted over quest for straight hair
  25. A deadly herpes virus is threatening oysters around the world
  26. Can random bits of DNA lead to safe, new antibiotics and herbicides?
  27. The only safe email is text-only email
  28. Does marijuana affect your sleep?
  29. Cholera fears rise following Atlantic hurricanes: Are we making any progress?
  30. 'Is truth overrated?' What the experts say
  31. Why social media apps should be in your disaster kit
  32. Are catastrophic disasters striking more often?
  33. 'Third Rail with OZY' asks 'Is truth overrated?' 6 essential reads
  34. 6 rules for rebuilding infrastructure in an era of 'unprecedented' weather events
  35. 'Is truth overrated?' 6 essential reads
  36. Want better sleep? Spend face-to-face time with your friends and family
  37. Parkinson's disease: New drugs and treatments, but where are the doctors?
  38. Massive sunspots and huge solar flares mean unexpected space weather for Earth
  39. How fashion adapted to climate change – in the Little Ice Age
  40. Why UN sanctions against North Korea's missile program failed
  41. The world is facing a global sand crisis
  42. How flood insurance works: 6 questions answered
  43. Are natural disasters part of God's retribution?
  44. Why can't more American women access medications for preterm birth?
  45. Christian faith doesn't just say disasters are God's retribution
  46. Post-DACA: How Congress can replace Obama's program and make it even better
  47. How DACA affected the mental health of undocumented young adults
  48. The 'internet of things' is sending us back to the Middle Ages
  49. In defense of HBO's counterfactual 'Confederate'
  50. How a tiny portion of the world's oceans could help meet global seafood demand