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Amazon, Starbucks and the sparking of a new American union movement

  • Written by John Logan, Professor and Director of Labor and Employment Studies, San Francisco State University
imageThe start of a movement or a moment?AP Photo/Eduardo Munoz Alvarez

April 1, 2022, may go down as a pivotal day in the history of American unions.

In a result that could reverberate in workplaces across the U.S., the independent Amazon Labor Union – first formed in 2020 by Chris Smalls, an Amazon worker fired for protesting what he saw as...

Read more: Amazon, Starbucks and the sparking of a new American union movement

What is a dwarf planet?

  • Written by Vahe Peroomian, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
imagePluto, the largest of the dwarf planets. This image was taken by NASA's New Horizons spacecraft.NASA/JHUAPL/SwRIimage

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.


What is a dwarf planet? – Myranda, age 8, Knoxville, Tennessee


The word...

Read more: What is a dwarf planet?

Nuclear fusion hit a milestone thanks to better reactor walls – this engineering advance is building toward reactors of the future

  • Written by David Donovan, Associate Professor of Nuclear Engineering, University of Tennessee
imageMagnetic fusion reactors contain super hot plasma in a donut-shaped container called a tokamak.dani3315/iStock via Getty Images

Scientists at a laboratory in England have shattered the record for the amount of energy produced during a controlled, sustained fusion reaction. The production of 59 megajoules of energy over five seconds at the Joint...

Read more: Nuclear fusion hit a milestone thanks to better reactor walls – this engineering advance is...

These energy innovations could transform how we mitigate climate change, and save money in the process – 5 essential reads

  • Written by Stacy Morford, Environment + Climate Editor
imageBuilding solar panels over water sources is one way to both provide power and reduce evaporation in drought-troubled regions.Robin Raj, Citizen Group & Solar Aquagrid

To most people, a solar farm or a geothermal plant is an important source of clean energy. Scientists and engineers see that plus far more potential.

They envision offshore wind...

Read more: These energy innovations could transform how we mitigate climate change, and save money in the...

Pope Francis' visit to Malta highlights the role of St. George Preca, an advocate for teaching the gospel

  • Written by Joanne M. Pierce, Professor Emerita of Religious Studies, College of the Holy Cross
imagePope Francis presides over a special prayer in St. Peter's Basilica at the Vatican on March 25, 2022, before heading out to Malta for a two-day visit.AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia, File

Pope Francis’ two-day visit to the tiny European country of Malta, a strongly Catholic island just south of Sicily, in April, 2022 put a spotlight on Malta’s...

Read more: Pope Francis' visit to Malta highlights the role of St. George Preca, an advocate for teaching the...

What countries have nuclear weapons, and where are they?

  • Written by Miles A. Pomper, Senior Fellow, James Martin Center for Nonproliferation Studies, Middlebury
imageA U.S. Air Force jet performs a test drop of a B61-12 bomb in December 2021. That bomb can contain a nuclear warhead for use in wartime.Los Alamos National Laboratory

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has raised fears among the public about the use of nuclear weapons in Europe or against the United States. This level of concern has not been seen since...

Read more: What countries have nuclear weapons, and where are they?

The war in Ukraine ruins Russia's academic ties with the West

  • Written by Arik Burakovsky, Assistant Director, Russia and Eurasia Program, The Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy, Tufts University
imageU.S. universities are cutting ties with their Russian counterparts, such as Moscow State University, shown here. Alexander Nemenov/AFP via Getty Images

Since Russian President Vladimir Putin invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24, 2022, universities across Europe and the United States have condemned the war and cut ties with Russia altogether. In the following...

Read more: The war in Ukraine ruins Russia's academic ties with the West

SCOTUS is about to decide whether a public school football coach can pray on the field

  • Written by Charles J. Russo, Joseph Panzer Chair in Education in the School of Education and Health Sciences and Research Professor of Law, University of Dayton
imageWhen is a prayer after a public-school game constitutional?TerryJ/iStock via Getty Images Plus

The Supreme Court has consistently banned school-sponsored prayer in public K-12 schools, whether at the start of the school day, during graduation ceremonies or before football games. Under the Equal Access Act, the Supreme Court has affirmed that...

Read more: SCOTUS is about to decide whether a public school football coach can pray on the field

Medieval illustrated manuscripts reveal how upper-class women managed healthy households – overseeing everything from purging, leeching and cupping to picking the right wet nurse

  • Written by Jennifer Borland, Professor of Art History, Oklahoma State University

What type of images come to mind when you think of medieval art? Knights and ladies? Biblical scenes? Cathedrals? It’s probably not some unfortunate man in the throes of vomiting.

It might surprise you to learn this scene is found in a luxurious book from the Middle Ages made with the highest-quality materials, including abundant gold leaf....

Read more: Medieval illustrated manuscripts reveal how upper-class women managed healthy households –...

Tomorrow's COVID safety guidelines will be different from today's – but that doesn't mean yesterday's were wrong

  • Written by Michael Williams, Associate Professor of Surgery and Public Policy, University of Virginia
imageCOVID guidelines have changed a lot over the past few years as the pandemic has ebbed and flowed.AP Photo/Jeff Chiu

No one gave a second thought to the safety of dining out before the pandemic. Fast-forward to today, and it’s normal to wonder whether there is a city, state or federal policy around whether you need a mask or proof of...

Read more: Tomorrow's COVID safety guidelines will be different from today's – but that doesn't mean...

More Articles ...

  1. Is Russia committing genocide in Ukraine? A human rights expert looks at the warning signs
  2. Biden bets a million barrels a day will drive down soaring gas prices – what you need to know about the Strategic Petroleum Reserve
  3. The Human Genome Project pieced together only 92% of the DNA – now scientists have finally filled in the remaining 8%
  4. William Tecumseh Sherman knew the enduring cruelty of war
  5. Transgender people of color face unique challenges as gender discrimination and racism intersect
  6. Sri Lanka teeters on economic edge, from pandemic-fueled financial crisis and Ukraine war spillovers
  7. Behind the crypto hype is an ideology of social change
  8. Brains are bad at big numbers, making it impossible to grasp what a million COVID-19 deaths really means
  9. Criminal justice algorithms: Being race-neutral doesn’t mean race-blind
  10. Transgender women are finding some respect in India, but a traditional gender-nonconforming group – hijras – remains stigmatized
  11. 'Laugh right in its face' – a poet reflects on her craft's defiant role in the middle of a war
  12. Afghan evacuees lack a clear path for resettlement in the U.S., 7 months after Taliban takeover
  13. A new way to pick the best school for your child
  14. Much of the cost of dementia care in aging Native American adults is due to hospitalization
  15. What is aphasia? An expert explains the condition forcing Bruce Willis to retire from acting
  16. Black college presidents had a tough balancing act during the civil rights era
  17. Yes, Putin and Russia are fascist – a political scientist shows how they meet the textbook definition
  18. Black Lives Matter protests are shaping how people understand racial inequality
  19. Restoring touch through electrodes implanted in the human brain will require engineering around a sensory lag
  20. COVID-19 vaccines for the youngest children may be inching closer to authorization – a pediatrician explains how they're being tested
  21. What the new science of authenticity says about discovering your true self
  22. How does the COVID-19 prevention drug Evusheld work and who should receive it? An infectious disease specialist explains
  23. I no longer grade my students' work – and I wish I had stopped sooner
  24. Arctic greening won’t save the climate – here’s why
  25. How fast can we stop Earth from warming?
  26. Calling Putin a 'war criminal' could spark even more atrocities in Ukraine
  27. Can my electric car power my house? Not yet for most drivers, but vehicle-to-home charging is coming
  28. What is alopecia? It's no laughing matter for millions of Black American women
  29. Kids afraid of getting shots? Here are 3 easy ways for parents to help them
  30. Kiev ya se ha enfrentado a otras invasiones y la identidad ucraniana se ha fortalecido como respuesta
  31. Thousands of undiscovered mammal species may be hidden in plain sight, new research finds
  32. How did cockroaches survive the asteroid that led to the extinction of dinosaurs?
  33. What's the 411 on the new 988 hotline? 5 questions answered about a national mental health service
  34. Astronomy's 10-year wish list: Big money, bigger telescopes and the biggest questions in science
  35. Ukrainian female refugees are fleeing a war, but in some cases more violence awaits them where they find shelter
  36. Two Orthodox Christian countries at war – here's an explanation of the faith tradition shared by Russia and Ukraine
  37. Local governments are attractive targets for hackers and are ill-prepared
  38. Soaring crude prices make the cost of pretty much everything else go up too because we almost literally eat oil
  39. How MacKenzie Scott's $12 billion in gifts to charity reflect an uncommon trust in the groups she supports
  40. Coastal home buyers are ignoring rising flood risks, despite clear warnings and rising insurance premiums
  41. 2020 census miscounted Americans – 4 questions answered
  42. Asian American mothers confront multiple crises of pandemic, anti-Asian hate and caregiving
  43. #OscarsSoWhite still plagues Hollywood's highest achievement awards
  44. Even after lockdowns eased, pandemic depression persisted across social classes – new study
  45. In Egypt, where a meal isn’t complete without bread, war in Ukraine is threatening the wheat supply and access to this staple food
  46. Longer naps in the day may be an early sign of dementia in older adults
  47. When Putin says Russia and Ukraine share one faith, he's leaving out a lot of the story
  48. Drugs that treat opioid use disorder are a good use for multibillion-dollar settlement funds
  49. With threats of nuclear war and climate disaster growing, America's 'bunker fantasy' is woefully inadequate
  50. Madeleine Albright saw US as an ‘indispensable nation’ and NATO expansion eastward as essential