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The Conversation

‘I love this work, but it’s killing me’: The unique toll of being a spiritual leader today

  • Written by Laura Captari, Clinical and Research Psychologist, The Danielsen Institute, Boston University
imageThe past few years have put even more stress on many clergy.Martine Severin/E+

Clergy, chaplains and other spiritual leaders play vital roles in their communities, from celebrating life’s most joyous moments to offering comfort and guidance in the face of tragedy.

However, the personal toll of this work on spiritual leaders can be immense,...

Read more: ‘I love this work, but it’s killing me’: The unique toll of being a spiritual leader today

Rocks on Rapa Nui tell the story of a small, resilient population − countering the notion of a doomed overpopulated island

  • Written by Carl Lipo, Professor of Anthropology and Associate Dean for Research, Binghamton University, State University of New York
imageCovering the ground with rocks is actually a good way to grow some crops in poor soil.Carl Lipo

Conventional wisdom holds that the island of Rapa Nui, also known as Easter Island, once had a large population that crashed after living beyond its means and stripping the island of resources. A new research study my colleagues and I conducted has...

Read more: Rocks on Rapa Nui tell the story of a small, resilient population − countering the notion of a...

Making art is a uniquely human act, and one that provides a wellspring of health benefits

  • Written by Girija Kaimal, Professor of Art Therapy Research, Drexel University
imageThe act of creating art serves as exercise for the brain and is integral to physical and mental health. hzechphotography/Moment via Getty Images

When you think about the word “art,” what comes to mind? A child’s artwork pinned to the fridge? A favorite artist whose work always inspires? Abstract art that is hard to understand?

Eac...

Read more: Making art is a uniquely human act, and one that provides a wellspring of health benefits

Boost your immune system with this centuries-old health hack: Vaccines

  • Written by Aimee Pugh Bernard, Assistant Professor of Immunology and Microbiology, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
imageWhen it comes to vaccines and immune health, the results aren't too good to be true.Jena Ardell/Moment via Getty Images

There are a dizzying number of tips, hacks and recommendations on how to stay healthy, from dietary supplements to what color of clothes promotes optimal wellness. Some of these tips are helpful and based on good evidence, while...

Read more: Boost your immune system with this centuries-old health hack: Vaccines

Paying reparations for slavery is possible – based on a study of federal compensation to farmers, fishermen, coal miners, radiation victims and 70 other groups

  • Written by Linda J. Bilmes, Daniel Patrick Moynihan Senior Lecturer in Public Policy and Public Finance, Harvard Kennedy School
imageA group of formerly enslaved people gather on a South Carolina plantation during the Union occupation in 1862. Corbis/ Getty Images

As Americans celebrate Juneteenth, legislation for a commission to study reparations for harms resulting from the enslavement of nearly 4 million people has languished in Congress for more than 30 years.

Though America...

Read more: Paying reparations for slavery is possible – based on a study of federal compensation to farmers,...

Philly has highest STI rates in the country – improving sex ed in schools and access to at-home testing could lower rates

  • Written by Carlos Mahaffey, Assistant Professor of Public Health, Purdue University
imageRates of syphilis and gonorrhea have risen significantly among Philadelphians age 15-24 over the past five years. Dusan Stankovic/DigitalVision Vectors via Getty Images

Philadelphia ranks No. 1 among U.S. cities for new sexually transmitted infections – STIs – according to the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and...

Read more: Philly has highest STI rates in the country – improving sex ed in schools and access to at-home...

Southern Baptists may have rejected a constitutional amendment opposing female pastors, but that does not mean they are changing their views on women’s leadership in church

  • Written by Susan M. Shaw, Professor of Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Oregon State University
imageMessengers raise their ballots in support of a motion during the Southern Baptist Convention annual meeting on June 11, 2024, in Indianapolis.AP Photo/Doug McSchooler

The recent annual meeting of the Southern Baptist Convention saw a number of motions related to women. The Conversation asked Susan Shaw, a gender and sexuality studies scholar who...

Read more: Southern Baptists may have rejected a constitutional amendment opposing female pastors, but that...

Elder fraud has reached epidemic proportions – a geriatrician explains what older Americans need to know

  • Written by Laurie Archbald-Pannone, Associate Professor of Medicine and Geriatrics, University of Virginia
imageBe careful out there.ArtMarie/Getty Images

Americans age 60 and older lost more than US$3 billion to scammers in 2023, according to the FBI.

To put that whopping figure in context, Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour recently made news as the first concert tour ever to earn $1 billion.

As a geriatrician – a doctor who cares for people over 65...

Read more: Elder fraud has reached epidemic proportions – a geriatrician explains what older Americans need...

Is Earth really getting too hot for people to survive? A scientist explains extreme heat and the role of climate change

  • Written by Scott Denning, Professor of Atmospheric Science, Colorado State University
imageHeat waves can get dangerously hot, especially when it's also humid.gjohnstonphoto/iStock/Getty Images Plusimage

Curious Kids is a series for children of all ages. If you have a question you’d like an expert to answer, send it to curiouskidsus@theconversation.com.


My parents said the planet is getting too hot for people to live here. They called it...

Read more: Is Earth really getting too hot for people to survive? A scientist explains extreme heat and the...

What Frederick Douglass learned from an Irish antislavery activist: ‘Agitate, agitate, agitate’

  • Written by Christine Kinealy, Director of Ireland's Great Hunger Institute, Quinnipiac University
imageBorn into slavery, Frederick Douglass became one of the leading abolitionists in America. Bettmann/Getty Images

Though Frederick Douglass remains the most well-known abolitionist to visit Ireland in the decades prior to the American Civil War, he was not the only one.

As many as 30 Black abolitionists and activists also traveled to Ireland between...

Read more: What Frederick Douglass learned from an Irish antislavery activist: ‘Agitate, agitate, agitate’

More Articles ...

  1. Central banks face threats to their independence − and that isn’t good news for sound economic stewardship (or battling inflation)
  2. Calls to US poison centers spiked after ‘magic mushrooms’ were decriminalized
  3. From glowing corals to vomiting shrimp, animals have used bioluminescence to communicate for millions of years – here’s what scientists still don’t know about it
  4. Supreme Court unanimously concludes that anti-abortion groups have no standing to challenge access to mifepristone – but the drug likely faces more court challenges
  5. Supreme Court sides with Starbucks in labor case that could hinder government’s ability to intervene in some unionization disputes
  6. An homage to the dad joke, one of the great traditions of fatherhood
  7. The US is losing wetlands at an accelerating rate − here’s how the private sector can help protect these valuable resources
  8. Supreme Court justices secretly recorded – the legal issues and what they mean for the rest of us
  9. Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronauts
  10. Ukraine’s draft woes leave the West facing pressure to make up for the troop shortfall
  11. People ambivalent about political issues support violence more than those with clear opinions
  12. Civil rights leader James Lawson, who learned from Gandhi, used nonviolent resistance and the ‘power of love’ to challenge injustice
  13. Philadelphia’s 200-year-old disability records show welfare reform movement’s early shift toward rationing care and punishing poor people
  14. Cities with empty commercial space and housing shortages are converting office buildings into apartments – here’s what they’re learning
  15. Spikes, seat dividers, even ‘Baby Shark’ − camping bans like the one under review at SCOTUS are part of broader strategies that push out homeless people
  16. Inflation is cooling, but not fast enough for the Fed: Policymakers now expect only one rate cut in 2024
  17. Microrobots made of algae carry chemo directly to lung tumors, improving cancer treatment
  18. Columbia Law Review article critical of Israel sparks battle between student editors and their board − highlighting fragility of academic freedom
  19. American womanhood is not what it used to be − understanding the backlash to Dobbs v. Jackson
  20. There’s a strange history of white journalists trying to better understand the Black experience by ‘becoming’ Black
  21. ‘Fiddler on the Roof’ may be many Americans’ image of Judaism – but American Jews’ heritage is stunningly diverse
  22. Politics is still both local and personal – but only for independents, not for Democrats or Republicans
  23. Wastewater surveillance reveals pathogens in Detroit’s population, helping monitor and predict disease outbreaks since 2017
  24. Paris 2024 Olympics to debut high-level breakdancing – and physics in action
  25. Food has a climate problem: Nitrous oxide emissions are accelerating with growing demand for fertilizer and meat – but there are solutions
  26. African elephants address one another with name-like calls − similar to humans
  27. 8 fun questions about The Conversation
  28. How reciting the Pledge of Allegiance became a sacred, patriotic ritual
  29. PFAS are toxic ‘forever chemicals’ that linger in our air, water, soil and bodies – here’s how to keep them out of your drinking water
  30. Summertime can be germy: A microbiologist explains how to avoid getting sick at the barbecue, in the pool or on the trail
  31. Independent voters are few in number, influential in close elections – and hard for campaigns to reach
  32. Losing winter ice is changing the Great Lakes food web – here’s how light is shaping life underwater
  33. Are older adults more vulnerable to scams? What psychologists have learned about who’s most susceptible, and when
  34. Complaints are different when customers think a company cares
  35. Coral reef recovery could get a boost from an unlikely source: Sea cucumbers, the janitors of the seafloor
  36. Biden and Trump may forget names or personal details, but here is what really matters in assessing whether they’re cognitively up for the job
  37. The warming ocean is leaving coastal economies in hot water
  38. How DEI rollbacks at colleges and universities set back learning
  39. American slavery wasn’t just a white man’s business − new research shows how white women profited, too
  40. NASA’s asteroid sample mission gave scientists around the world the rare opportunity to study an artificial meteor
  41. How do you build tunnels and bridges underwater? A geotechnical engineer explains the construction tricks
  42. Indian election was awash in deepfakes – but AI was a net positive for democracy
  43. How much do you need to know about how your spouse spends money? Maybe less than you think
  44. 2020’s ‘fake elector’ schemes will be harder to try in 2024 – but not impossible
  45. Why is it so hard to know how many independent voters there are?
  46. Getting services to people in need often relies on partnerships between government and nonprofits, but reporting requirements can be too onerous
  47. AI search answers are the fast food of your information diet – convenient and tasty, but no substitute for good nutrition
  48. Scientists call the region of space influenced by the Sun the heliosphere – but without an interstellar probe, they don’t know much about its shape
  49. Scientists and Indigenous leaders team up to conserve seals and an ancestral way of life at Yakutat, Alaska
  50. Records of Pompeii’s survivors have been found – and archaeologists are starting to understand how they rebuilt their lives