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A year ago, the hostages were a rallying point for solidarity in Israel – now, their families are symbols of the country’s sharp divides

  • Written by Shai P. Ginsburg, Associate Professor and Chair, Department of Asian and Middle Eastern Studies, Duke University
imagePeople in Tel Aviv protest against the Israeli government and call for the release of hostages held in the Gaza Strip on Sept. 21, 2024.AP Photo/Mahmoud Illean

In the run-up to the first anniversary of Hamas’ attack on Israel, there has been no shortage of dramatic events making headlines in Israel. On Oct. 1, Israelis took shelter during Iran...

Read more: A year ago, the hostages were a rallying point for solidarity in Israel – now, their families are...

Colleges could benefit from taking a data-driven look at hostility toward Jews on campus

  • Written by Graham Wright, Associate Research Scientist, Maurice & Marilyn Cohen Center for Modern Jewish Studies, Brandeis University

In the year that has passed since the Oct. 7 attack by Hamas on Israel, college campuses have been embroiled in debates about the resulting conflict. A major focus of these debates has been the surge in reports of antisemitic harassment of Jewish students, with campus administrators, faculty, politicians and pundits furiously arguing over the preva...

Read more: Colleges could benefit from taking a data-driven look at hostility toward Jews on campus

Palestinians want to choose their own leaders – a year of war has distanced them further from this democratic goal

  • Written by Maha Nassar, Associate Professor in the School of Middle Eastern and North African Studies, University of Arizona
imageA Palestinian university student casts a ballot in Gaza City in 2006.Abid Katib/Getty Images

Over the summer as Israel continued to bombard Gaza, representatives from 14 Palestinian factions, including the two main parties – Hamas and Fatah – met in China. Following the most inclusive talks in years, all the parties agreed to a future...

Read more: Palestinians want to choose their own leaders – a year of war has distanced them further from this...

A year of escalating conflict in the Middle East has ushered in a new era of regional displacement

  • Written by Nicholas R. Micinski, Assistant Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, University of Maine
imageHundreds of thousands of people are fleeing into civil war-torn Syria from Lebanon.Louai Beshara/AFP via Getty Images

A year of conflict has ushered in a new era of mass displacement in the Middle East.

Since Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and the subsequent sustained Israeli bombardment of Gaza, Israel has expanded its operations...

Read more: A year of escalating conflict in the Middle East has ushered in a new era of regional displacement

Dockworkers pause strike after Biden administration’s appeal to patriotism hits the mark

  • Written by Anna Nagurney, Eugene M. Isenberg Chair in Integrative Studies, UMass Amherst
imagePort Everglades dockworkers walk a picket line while on strike on Oct. 3, 2024, in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.Joe Raedle/Getty Images

A dockworkers strike that froze operations at East Coast and Gulf Coast ports for 2½ days was paused on Oct. 3, 2024. The Conversation U.S. asked Anna Nagurney, a scholar of supply chains, to assess the extent of...

Read more: Dockworkers pause strike after Biden administration’s appeal to patriotism hits the mark

A year after Hamas attack, more continuity than change for the Palestinians and Israel

  • Written by Michal Ben-Josef Hirsch, Associate Professor of Political Science and Legal Studies, Suffolk University

The rapid pace of unfolding events between Israel and the Palestinians, and more broadly in the Middle East, can make people think change is inevitable.

Political scientists like me sometimes see significant and disruptive events, such as the Hamas attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, and their aftermath as drivers of heightened uncertainty with the po...

Read more: A year after Hamas attack, more continuity than change for the Palestinians and Israel

Some online conspiracy-spreaders don’t even believe the lies they’re spewing

  • Written by H. Colleen Sinclair, Associate Research Professor of Social Psychology, Louisiana State University
imageWhen people spread lies online, they may know they're sharing falsehoods.Timucin Taka/500 px via Getty Images

There has been a lot of research on the types of people who believe conspiracy theories, and their reasons for doing so. But there’s a wrinkle: My colleagues and I have found that there are a number of people sharing conspiracies...

Read more: Some online conspiracy-spreaders don’t even believe the lies they’re spewing

Trees’ own beneficial microbiome could lead to discovery of new treatments to fight citrus greening disease

  • Written by Kateel G. Shetty, Assistant Professor of Earth and Environment, Florida International University
imageCitrus is still big business in Florida, but the industry has taken a massive hit in recent decades.Joe Raedle/via Getty Images

Citrus trees showing natural tolerance to citrus greening disease host bacteria that produce novel antimicrobials that can be used to fight off the disease, our recent study shows. We found the trees at an organic farm in...

Read more: Trees’ own beneficial microbiome could lead to discovery of new treatments to fight citrus...

Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time − but designing the reactors that would power them isn’t easy

  • Written by Dan Kotlyar, Associate Professor of Nuclear and Radiological Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageNuclear-powered rockets could one day enable faster space travel. NASA

NASA plans to send crewed missions to Mars over the next decade – but the 140 million-mile (225 million-kilometer) journey to the red planet could take several months to years round trip.

This relatively long transit time is a result of the use of traditional chemical...

Read more: Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time − but designing the reactors that would...

Low pay, high staff turnover and employee burnout took a toll on social service nonprofits during the COVID-19 pandemic − new research

  • Written by Susan Neely-Barnes, Professor of Social Work, University of Memphis
imageProfessional caregivers do essential work but often earn low wages.FatCamera/E+ via Getty Images

Social service nonprofits had high rates of staff turnover and a hard time filling vacant positions in 2022 as the COVID-19 pandemic was ending.

Low salaries, inadequate benefits, staff burnout and a shortage of qualified job applicants were largely to...

Read more: Low pay, high staff turnover and employee burnout took a toll on social service nonprofits during...

More Articles ...

  1. As Yelp turns 20, online reviews continue to confound and confuse shoppers
  2. Kamala Harris illustrates how complex identity is − and the pressure many multiracial people feel to put themselves in one ‘box’
  3. Iran’s strike on Israel was retaliatory – but it was also about saving face and restoring deterrence
  4. Presidential immunity has clear limits, special counsel filing says, and Trump should be tried for efforts to overturn 2020 election
  5. Up against Hank Greenberg, baseball’s first Jewish superstar, antisemitism struck out
  6. Israeli actions have the cover of ‘moral hazard’ − a touch of ambiguity might give US pressure greater weight
  7. Black Pentecostal and charismatic Christians are boosting their visibility in politics − a shift from the past
  8. Bottled up in the Black Sea: Russia is having a dreadful naval war, hindering its great power ambitions
  9. Latino voters are a growing force in Pennsylvania’s old industrial towns − and they could provide Harris or Trump with their margin of victory
  10. Centuries ago, the Maya storm god Huracán taught that when we damage nature, we damage ourselves
  11. In ‘Nobody Wants This,’ rom-com gets century-old tropes with a new twist – the cute rabbi
  12. UAW is threatening new, smaller strikes against Stellantis − while contending with pressure from a court-appointed monitor
  13. What to expect from federal judges appointed by Trump or Harris − based on what we’ve seen from Trump and Biden picks for the Supreme Court and lower courts
  14. While Republicans are downplaying abortion ahead of November, Democrats are leaning in on the issue
  15. More and more, business schools want to show they’re making a positive impact on society. But how should they measure it?
  16. Cities are clearing encampments, but this won’t solve homelessness − here’s a better way forward
  17. Gut microbe imbalances could predict a child’s risk for autism, ADHD and speech disorders years before symptoms appear
  18. Why CNN is changing up its polling for 2024
  19. Philly block parties can lead to small boosts in voter turnout, new research suggests
  20. Russia’s new ideological battlefield: The militarization of young minds
  21. Why are so many historically rare storms hitting the Carolinas? Geography puts these states at risk, and climate change is loading the dice
  22. Studying science fiction films can help students understand the power societies have to shape our lives
  23. Accept our king, our god − or else: The senseless ‘requirement’ Spanish colonizers used to justify their bloodshed in the Americas
  24. What the facial expressions of Tim Walz and JD Vance said about their nerves, embarrassment and pride
  25. America’s dad vs. the manosphere: Walz-Vance debate highlights two versions of masculinity
  26. Iran’s strikes on Israel are the latest sign that the conflict in the Middle East is spiraling, presenting rising global security threats
  27. Health risks are rising in mountain areas flooded by Hurricane Helene and cut off from clean water, power and hospitals
  28. Being ‘mindful’ about your bank account can bring more than peace of mind − a researcher explains the payoff
  29. Yes, calling someone ‘mentally disabled’ causes real harm
  30. Kamala Harris’ and Donald Trump’s records on abortion policy couldn’t be more different – here’s what actions they both have taken while in office
  31. Want to solve a complex problem? Applied math can help
  32. You can count female physics Nobel laureates on one hand – recent winners have wisdom for young women in the field
  33. Being bullied in high school can make teens less optimistic about the future
  34. Congress is trying to force carmakers to keep AM radio − it should also use this opportunity to correct the mistakes of the past
  35. Toxic chemicals from Ohio train derailment lingered in buildings for months – here’s what our investigation found in East Palestine
  36. NYC’s ‘Eric Adams Show’ heads for a final curtain, with echoes of another New Yorker more focused on style than policy
  37. Voters without kids are in the political spotlight – but they’re not all the same
  38. Trump and Harris have clashing records on clean energy, but the clean power shift is too broad for any president to control
  39. We studied 19,898 Kickstarter campaigns − and discovered that talking politics hurts fundraising
  40. Companies keep selling harmful products – but history shows consumers can win in the end
  41. In storms like Hurricane Helene, flooded industrial sites and toxic chemical releases are a silent and growing threat
  42. How the Taliban’s new ‘vice and virtue’ law erases women by justifying violence against them
  43. Is it bad to listen to music all the time? Here’s how tunes can help or harm
  44. Why trying to protect freedom may work better than campaigning to protect democracy
  45. Does Hezbollah represent Lebanon? And what impact will the death of longtime leader Hassan Nasrallah have?
  46. Brown bananas, crowded ports, empty shelves: What to expect if there’s a big dockworkers strike in the US
  47. Brown bananas, crowded ports, empty shelves: What to expect with the US dockworkers strike
  48. What White Sox owner Jerry Reinsdorf can learn from the last team to lose 120 games
  49. Hurricane Helene power outages leave over 4 million in the dark – history shows poorer areas often wait longest for electricity to be restored
  50. Hurricane Helene power outages leave millions in the dark – history shows poorer areas often wait longest for electricity to be restored