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The Conversation

'Should the U.S. take in more or fewer Syrian refugees?'

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The Conversation’s collaboration with Point Taken continues this week with an in-depth look at the Syrian refugee crisis. Point Taken is an exciting new program from WGBH TV that features debate on a topic that Americans care about –- without the shouting.

Up for discussion on Tuesday, April 19 at 11 Eastern/10 Central on PBS and at...

Read more: 'Should the U.S. take in more or fewer Syrian refugees?'

A decisive New York primary for the Clintons – again

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The April 19 primary in New York looks like it will play a familiar role in this latest Clinton presidential campaign.

Bernie Sanders is hoping his Brooklyn roots and left-wing stands will propel him to victory there, finally altering the dynamic of the race in his favor.

More likely, however, is that the New York primary will do for Hillary Clinton...

Read more: A decisive New York primary for the Clintons – again

Did you cheat on your taxes? Here's why your days may be numbered

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThe IRS may soon be able to snare every last $100 bill. Fishing bill via www.shutterstock.com

The so-called Panama Papers span thousands of pages, revealing that many of the world’s elite have been hiding their money in offshore accounts in an attempt to shield their income from taxes.

Their release – the biggest data leak in history &nda...

Read more: Did you cheat on your taxes? Here's why your days may be numbered

Brazil's thriving soy industry threatens its forests and global climate targets

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageSoy fields in Brazilian Amazon rainforestFrontpage/www.Shutterstock.com

Brazil’s economy is teetering on the edge of collapse. The country’s political regime has been rocked by recent corruption scandals, and impeachment proceedings are encircling the nation’s leaders. And yet things couldn’t be much better for...

Read more: Brazil's thriving soy industry threatens its forests and global climate targets

Why the Internet isn't making us smarter – and how to fight back

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDo you ever feel like this? It's not helping you get smarter...Chris Hope, CC BY-SA

In the hours since I first sat down to write this piece, my laptop tells me the National Basketball Association has had to deny that it threatened to cancel its 2017 All-Star Game over a new anti-LGBT law in North Carolina – a story repeated by many news...

Read more: Why the Internet isn't making us smarter – and how to fight back

Why the baby brain can learn two languages at the same time

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHow do babies learn language?Irene Zaccari, CC BY-NC-ND

Any adult who has attempted to learn a foreign language can attest to how difficult and confusing it can be. So when a three-year-old growing up in a bilingual household inserts Spanish words into his English sentences, conventional wisdom assumes that he is confusing the two languages.

Research...

Read more: Why the baby brain can learn two languages at the same time

The murky ethics of Gay Talese's 'The Voyeur's Motel'

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFor years, Talese's subject, Gerald Foos, spied on his motel guests.'Binoculars' via www.shutterstock.com

In order to report on a motel-owning voyeur who, for years, secretly spied on guests having sex, writer Gay Talese agreed to not identify the motelier, Gerald Foos. Talese even signed a confidentiality agreement that Foos had prepared.

With this...

Read more: The murky ethics of Gay Talese's 'The Voyeur's Motel'

More Articles ...

  1. How could we build an invisibility cloak to hide Earth from an alien civilization?
  2. Free trade is once again tearing apart the Republican Party
  3. Russia: a global energy powerhouse that's much more than a petro-state
  4. How playing video games can change your retirement
  5. How cults exploit one of our most basic psychological urges
  6. How to protect nuclear plants from terrorists
  7. Is it too late for Trump and Clinton to become more likable?
  8. Partisan divide over income inequality makes reducing it even harder
  9. New autism research: a nutrient called carnitine might counteract gene mutations linked with ASD risks
  10. How politics played a major role in the signing of Jackie Robinson
  11. Should America be focusing on ISIS when North Korea poses an existential threat?
  12. Has China's coal use peaked? Here's how to read the tea leaves
  13. Simply punishing students for bullying will not address the problem
  14. Panama Papers show how easy it is to finance terror using U.S. shell companies
  15. Does the First Amendment protect religious freedom laws?
  16. U.S. companies may need to beef up data privacy – but only for Europeans
  17. Here's why kids fall behind in science
  18. The sharing economy comes to scientific research
  19. TV-watching couch potatoes have outsized energy footprint
  20. Are poor societies stuck with dictators?
  21. Has Haiti's cholera epidemic become a permanent problem?
  22. For female architects, the loss of Zaha Hadid is personal
  23. Will the health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: maybe
  24. Why robots need to be able to say 'No'
  25. Will we soon see another wave of bird extinctions in the Americas?
  26. Why teachers are unable to stop bias-based bullying
  27. Women's soccer shows how far we've come since Title IX – and what battles remain
  28. Offshore drilling: why it makes economic sense to wait
  29. The novel and play that predicted Donald Trump's rise – and countered a swell of Great Depression demagoguery
  30. Reconsidering Body Worlds: why do we still flock to exhibits of dead human beings?
  31. Taxpayers beware: tax software may end up costing more than you think
  32. The most American pop culture phenomenon of them all
  33. Will a new government report on health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: perhaps
  34. Tiny flea reveals the devastating costs of invasive species
  35. Four questions Belgians should ask about the Patriot Act
  36. Customer service on hold: we hate phone menus and don’t trust virtual assistants like Siri
  37. Are drones really dangerous to airplanes?
  38. We need a national conversation about sensible drone laws
  39. Are robots taking our jobs?
  40. What schools don't tell you about campus sexual assault
  41. Do prehistoric Pueblo populist revolutions presage American politics today?
  42. Will the Tesla Model 3 recharge the U.S. electric vehicle market?
  43. Why make-believe play is an important part of childhood development
  44. Winning Wisconsin won't fix Bernie Sanders' superdelegate problem
  45. From Panama papers to Brazilian bribes: why corruption is so costly
  46. When covering elections, journalists face a debilitating dilemma
  47. How drones can improve scientific research in the field
  48. Why X-ray astronomers are anxious for good news from troubled Hitomi satellite
  49. Fewer poor students are being enrolled in state universities. Here's why
  50. 'What has happened to the American Dream?'