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The Conversation

What are false flag attacks – and could Russia make one work in the information age?

  • Written by Scott Radnitz, Associate Professor of International Studies, University of Washington
imageThe Russian and Ukrainian governments both blamed forces aligned with the other for mortar fire in eastern Ukraine and for using the accusations as justification for increased aggression.AP Photo/Vadim Ghirda

In the past few weeks, U.S. officials have warned severaltimes that Russia plans to create the appearance of an attack on its own forces and...

Read more: What are false flag attacks – and could Russia make one work in the information age?

Rising costs of climate change threaten to make skiing a less diverse, even more exclusive sport

  • Written by Brian P. McCullough, Associate Professor of Sport Management and Director of the Laboratory for Sustainability in Sport, Texas A&M University
imageSome resorts have launched diversity efforts to try to appeal to a wider community.Johannes Kroemer via Getty Images

Watching skiers compete almost entirelyon artificially made snow at the 2022 Winter Olympics, we found it hard not to think about climate change and what it will mean for the future of the winter sports industry – and who will...

Read more: Rising costs of climate change threaten to make skiing a less diverse, even more exclusive sport

Happy Twosday! Why numbers like 2/22/22 have been too fascinating for over 2,000 years

  • Written by Barry Markovsky, Distinguished Professor Emeritus of Sociology, University of South Carolina
imageIs "Twosday" as special as some corners of the internet seem to think?articular/iStock via Getty Images Plus

This Feb. 22, the world hits an unprecedented milestone. It’s the date itself: 2/22/22. And this so-called “Twosday” falls on a Tuesday, no less.

It’s true the number pattern stands out, impossible to miss. But does...

Read more: Happy Twosday! Why numbers like 2/22/22 have been too fascinating for over 2,000 years

The Supreme Court could hamstring federal agencies' regulatory power in a high-profile air pollution case

  • Written by Albert C. Lin, Professor of Law, University of California, Davis
imageCoal piles outside of PacifiCorp's Hunter power plant in Castle Dale, Utah.George Frey, AFP, via Getty Images

On Feb. 28, 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in West Virginia v. EPA, a case that centers on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions that drive climate change. How...

Read more: The Supreme Court could hamstring federal agencies' regulatory power in a high-profile air...

Want better child care? Invest in entrepreneurial training for child care workers

  • Written by Anne Douglass, Professor of Early Care and Education Leadership, Policy, and Practice, UMass Boston
imageEntrepreneurial leadership values expertise from providers, educators and parents. SDI Productions/E+ via Getty Images

Christine Heer – a veteran preschool teacher – had long harbored a passion to run a nature-based preschool. So in 2015 she opened Sprouts Farm and Forest Kindergarten in central Massachusetts.

Diana Stinson did...

Read more: Want better child care? Invest in entrepreneurial training for child care workers

Female business travelers pay less than their male colleagues because they tend to book earlier

  • Written by Javier D. Donna, Assistant Professor of Economics, University of Florida
imageWomen tend to book business travel earlier than men.Michael Duva/Stone via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Female employees consistently pay lower airfares than men do for the same flights because they tend to book earlier, according to a new peer-reviewed article I co-authored.

To reach...

Read more: Female business travelers pay less than their male colleagues because they tend to book earlier

Can religion and faith combat eco-despair?

  • Written by Rita D. Sherma, Associate Professor of Dharma Studies, Graduate Theological Union
imageThere's a growing belief that teachings from religious faiths belong in the discussion around environmental protection. ImagineGolf/E+/Getty Images

Scientists regularly study the ongoing degradation of Earth’s environment and track the changes wrought by a warming planet. Economists warn that intensifying disasters are harming people’s...

Read more: Can religion and faith combat eco-despair?

Yoko Ono's prophetic vision of self-care

  • Written by Brigid Cohen, Associate Professor of Music, New York University
imageTo Yoko Ono, imaginative acts were a form of survival.Susan Wood/Getty Images

Light a match and watch till it goes out. Go to the middle of Central Park Pond and drop all your jewelry. Scream against the sky.

When a young Yoko Ono formulated these actions in the 1950s and 1960s, they heralded a bracingly quirky vision for the arts as a therapeutic...

Read more: Yoko Ono's prophetic vision of self-care

Anti-Asian violence spiked in the US during the pandemic, especially in blue-state cities

  • Written by Arie Perliger, Director of Security Studies and Professor of Criminology and Justice Studies, UMass Lowell
imageAnti-Asian attacks killed nine people in 2021, including 84-year-old Vicha Ratanapakdee, seen in a photo held by his daughter Monthanus Ratanapakdee.AP Photo/Terry Chea

It’s widely known that Asian Americans felt – and were – persecutedduring the pandemic. But the extent of this violence, and its uneven geographic distribution...

Read more: Anti-Asian violence spiked in the US during the pandemic, especially in blue-state cities

Deer, mink and hyenas have caught COVID-19 – animal virologists explain how to find the coronavirus in animals and why humans need to worry

  • Written by Sue VandeWoude, University Distinguished Professor of Microbiology, Immunology, and Pathology and Director of the One Health Institute, Colorado State University
imageWhite-tailed deer are one of the few wild species that scientists have found to be infected with the coronavirus – at least so far.Andrew C/WikimediaCommons, CC BY

In April 2020, tigers and lions at the Bronx Zoo made the news when they came down with COVID-19. In the months following these surprising diagnoses, researchers and veterinarians...

Read more: Deer, mink and hyenas have caught COVID-19 – animal virologists explain how to find the...

More Articles ...

  1. Invading Ukraine may never have been Putin's aim – the threat alone could advance Russia's goals
  2. All American presidents have lied – the question is why and when
  3. The Ancient Greeks also lived through a plague, and they too blamed their leaders for their suffering
  4. Super Bowl ads turn up the volume on cryptocurrency buzz: 6 essential reads about digital money and the promise of blockchain
  5. For bullied teens, online school offered a safe haven
  6. Despite its disastrous effects, COVID-19 offers some gifts to medicine – an immunology expert explains what it can teach us about autoimmune disease
  7. Does scaring people work when it comes to health messaging? A communication researcher explains how it's gone wrong during the COVID-19 pandemic
  8. Canadian trucker protests show how the loudest voices in the room distort democracy
  9. African wild dogs cope with human development using skills they rely on to compete with other carnivores
  10. Why $73 million Sandy Hook settlement is unlikely to unleash a flood of lawsuits against gun-makers
  11. What drives sea level rise? US report warns of 1-foot rise within three decades and more frequent flooding
  12. Appeal in Sarah Palin's libel loss could set up Supreme Court test of decades-old media freedom rule
  13. Old statues of Confederate generals are slowly disappearing – will monuments honoring people of color replace them?
  14. Toshio Mori endured internment camps and overcame discrimination to become the first Japanese American to publish a book of fiction
  15. How poisonous mercury gets from coal-fired power plants into the fish you eat
  16. Girls still fall behind boys in top scores for AP math exams
  17. Trust comes when you admit what you don’t know – lessons from child development research
  18. After the FDA issued warnings about antidepressants, youth suicides rose and mental health care dropped
  19. How recess helps students learn
  20. Why do people get diarrhea?
  21. Technology is revolutionizing how intelligence is gathered and analyzed – and opening a window onto Russian military activity around Ukraine
  22. First gene therapy for Tay-Sachs disease successfully given to two children
  23. What do students’ beliefs about God have to do with grades and going to college?
  24. Physics and psychology of cats – an (improbable) conversation
  25. How Sylvia Plath’s secret miscarriage transforms our understanding of her poetry
  26. How Russia hooked Europe on its oil and gas – and overcame US efforts to prevent energy dependence on Moscow
  27. What is the ‘social cost of carbon’? 2 energy experts explain after court ruling blocks Biden's changes
  28. Whether up in smoke or down the toilet, missing presidential records are a serious concern
  29. In research studies and in real life, placebos have a powerful healing effect on the body and mind
  30. Your sense of privacy evolved over millennia – that puts you at risk today but could improve technology tomorrow
  31. 4 ways to help STEM majors stay the course
  32. This god shoots love darts – but no, it's not Cupid
  33. Supreme Court's ruling on Alabama voting map could open the door to a new Wild West of state redistricting
  34. Puerto Rico has a plan to recover from bankruptcy — but the deal won't ease people's daily struggles
  35. The advantages of museum philanthropy that builds staff diversity rather than new wings and galleries
  36. What the mythical Cupid can teach us about the meaning of love and desire
  37. The risk of concussion lurks at the Super Bowl – and in all other sports
  38. Heat waves hit the poor hardest – a new study calculates the rising impact on those least able to adapt to the warming climate
  39. How raising interest rates curbs inflation – and what could possibly go wrong
  40. What The Conversation talks about when it talks about football: 3 essential reads ahead of the Super Bowl
  41. How Joe Rogan became podcasting's Goliath
  42. The shameful stories of environmental injustices at Japanese American incarceration camps during WWII
  43. A brief history of the NFL, 'The Star-Spangled Banner,' the Super Bowl and their tangled saga of patriotism and dissent
  44. Inmates' hunger strikes take powerful stands against injustice
  45. In countries more biased against women, higher COVID-19 death rates for men might not tell an accurate story
  46. No-knock warrants, a relic of the 'war on drugs,' face renewed criticism after Minneapolis death
  47. What makes a fruit flavorful? Artificial intelligence can help optimize cultivars to match consumer preferences
  48. New research suggests modern humans lived in Europe 10,000 years earlier than previously thought, in Neanderthal territories
  49. Ski jump: Flying or falling with style?
  50. Partnering up can help you grow as an individual – here's the psychology of a romantic relationship that expands the self