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The Conversation

When the federal budget funds scientific research, it's the economy that benefits

  • Written by Christopher Keane, Vice President for Research and Professor of Physics, Washington State University
imageImpacts of federal research funding can be felt region-wide.f11photo/Shutterstock.com

Emergency: You need more disposable diapers, right away. You hop into your car and trust your ride will be a safe one. Thanks to your phone’s GPS and the microchips that run it, you map out how to get to the store fast. Once there, the barcode on the package...

Read more: When the federal budget funds scientific research, it's the economy that benefits

George Romero's zombies will make Americans reflect on racial violence long after his death

  • Written by Erin C. Cassese, Associate Professor of Political Science, West Virginia University
imageAnnual 2010 zombie march in Madrid, an homage to George A. Romero.AP Photo/Paul White

“What’s your zombie apocalypse survival plan?”

The question invites the liveliest discussions of the semester. I teach a course on social movements in fiction and film at West Virginia University, where I also conduct research on race and gender p...

Read more: George Romero's zombies will make Americans reflect on racial violence long after his death

Do we have too many national monuments? 4 essential reads

  • Written by Jennifer Weeks, Editor, Environment and Energy, The Conversation
imageBrowns Canyon National Monument, Colorado.Bob Wick, BLM, CC BY

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories.

Under an order from President Trump, Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke is reviewing the status of 27 national monuments that were designated or expanded by presidents as far back as Jan. 1, 1996, using authority under the...

Read more: Do we have too many national monuments? 4 essential reads

When Pat and Bob nearly saved health care reform: A lesson in Senatorial bedside manner

  • Written by Joseph J. Fins, E. William Davis Jr, MD Professor of Medical Ethics, Professor of Medicine and Chief, Division of Medical Ethics, Weill Cornell Medicine, Cornell University
imageSen. Robert Dole, Republican of Kansas, left, with Sen. Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Democrat of New York, on Capitol Hill in 1993.AP Photo/John Duricka

With Senator John McCain’s heroic return and Vice President Mike Pence’s tie-breaking vote on a health care bill July 25, Senate Republicans managed to cobble together 51 votes simply to...

Read more: When Pat and Bob nearly saved health care reform: A lesson in Senatorial bedside manner

How electric vehicles could take a bite out of the oil market

  • Written by Amy Myers Jaffe, Executive Director for Energy and Sustainability, University of California, Davis
imageSales of electric vehicles are growing fast, especially in Europe.Sopotnicki/Shutterstock.com

When will cars powered by gas-guzzling internal combustion engines become obsolete? Not as soon as it seems, even with the latest automotive news out of Europe.

First, Volvo announced it would begin to phase out the production of cars that run solely on...

Read more: How electric vehicles could take a bite out of the oil market

The US health economy is big, but is it better?

  • Written by Diane Dewar, Associate Professor of Health Policy, Management and Behavior, University at Albany, State University of New York
imageHealth care makes up a sizable portion of U.S. GDP.gpoiintstudio/Shutterstock.com

The U.S. health care system is the most expensive in the world. So why does it underperform relative to many peer countries by most measures?

While the Affordable Care Act increased access and coverage, its reforms are years away from full implementation and are now...

Read more: The US health economy is big, but is it better?

Concerned about concussions and brain injuries? 4 essential reads

  • Written by Lynne Anderson, Senior Editor, Health & Medicine, The Conversation
imageMichelle Vansickle, center, of Flowery Branch, Ga., during a youth football safety clinic March 18, 2014, in Alpharetta, Ga. AP Photo/Jason Getz

Editor’s note: The following is a roundup of archival stories about concussions, including advice on how to recognize symptoms and explanations of why they can be so dangerous to children.

A study...

Read more: Concerned about concussions and brain injuries? 4 essential reads

100 years ago African-Americans marched down 5th Avenue to declare that black lives matter

  • Written by Chad Williams, Associate Professor of African and Afro-American Studies, Brandeis University
imageSilent protest parade in New York against the East St. Louis riots, 1917.Library of Congress

The only sounds were those of muffled drums, the shuffling of feet and the gentle sobs of some of the estimated 20,000 onlookers. The women and children wore all white. The men dressed in black.

On the afternoon of Saturday, July 28, 1917, nearly 10,000...

Read more: 100 years ago African-Americans marched down 5th Avenue to declare that black lives matter

Stranded in our own communities: Transit deserts make it hard for people to find jobs and stay healthy

  • Written by Junfeng Jiao, Assistant Professor of Community and Regional Planning and Director, Urban Information Lab, University of Texas at Austin
imageMany Americans need reliable public transit to get to school or work.Frank Hank, CC BY-SA

As any commuter who has experienced unreliable service or lives miles away from a bus stop will tell you, sometimes public transit isn’t really a viable option, even in major cities.

In our car-loving society, where 85 percent of Americans use a car to...

Read more: Stranded in our own communities: Transit deserts make it hard for people to find jobs and stay...

More Articles ...

  1. The bigotry baked into welfare cuts
  2. Helping your student with disabilities prepare for the future
  3. Glioblastoma, a formidable foe, faces a 'reservoir of resilience' in McCain
  4. A philosopher argues why no one has the right to refuse services to LGBT people
  5. The hidden extra costs of living with a disability
  6. How public feuds on social media and reality TV play out​ in court
  7. Senate GOP opens health care debate. Now what?
  8. Learning disabilities do not define us
  9. How to succeed in college with a disability
  10. Hong Kong's democratic struggle and the rise of Chinese authoritarianism
  11. Do challenges make school seem impossible or worthwhile?
  12. What influences American giving?
  13. A bold, bipartisan plan to return the US to the vanguard of 21st-century technological innovation
  14. Biologics: The pricey drugs transforming medicine
  15. How killing the ACA could lead to more opioid deaths in West Virginia and other Trump states
  16. Fulfilling the promise of the Americans with Disabilities Act
  17. Venezuela's getting a new constitution whether the people want it or not
  18. History shows that stacking federal science advisory committees doesn't work
  19. How a job acquires a gender (and less authority if it's female)
  20. Mitch McConnell, the president's man in the Senate
  21. Why the Catholic Church bans gluten-free communion wafers
  22. Sharkathon 2017 is here: How to watch it like a scientist
  23. Who's avoiding sex, and why
  24. The Supreme Court made it harder for states to ban sex offenders from social media. Here’s why
  25. The Georgia peach may be vanishing, but its mythology is alive and well
  26. How some rich people are trying to dismantle inequality
  27. The Library of Congress opened its catalogs to the world. Here's why it matters
  28. Explaining the rise in hate crimes against Muslims in the US
  29. How Lula evolved from Brazil's top politician to its most notable convict
  30. Can Trump use the presidential pardon to thwart the Russia investigations?
  31. Why the US doesn't understand Chinese thought – and must
  32. Here's the three-pronged approach we're using in our own research to tackle the reproducibility issue
  33. Protecting your smartphone from voice impersonators
  34. How to make sure we all benefit when nonprofits patent technologies like CRISPR
  35. Dunkirk survivors’ terror didn’t end when they were rescued
  36. What's the deal with the debt ceiling? 5 questions answered
  37. Republicans fail on health care. Here's why the rest of Trump's agenda won't be 'so easy,' either
  38. Engaging Colombia's students may be key to long-term peace
  39. Human noise pollution is disrupting parks and wild places
  40. Why Trump's threat to slap tariffs on foreign steel is a bad idea
  41. Four charts that show who loses out if the White House cuts food stamps
  42. The real costs of cheap surveillance
  43. How the social gospel movement explains the roots of today's religious left
  44. Warnings on US cigarette packs not as effective as those in other countries
  45. Maryam Mirzakhani was a role model for more than just her mathematics
  46. Why police reforms rarely succeed: Lessons from Latin America
  47. Digital database captures voices from inside America's prisons
  48. Women still carry most of the world's water
  49. As academic hospitals lower mortality rates, should insurers reconsider excluding them?
  50. Hinduism and its complicated history with cows (and people who eat them)