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The Conversation USA

The US has a child labor problem – recalling an embarrassing past that Americans may think they've left behind

  • Written by Beth Saunders, Curator and Head of Special Collections and Gallery, University of Maryland, Baltimore County
imageLewis Wickes Hine, 'A little spinner in a Georgia Cotton Mill, 1909.'Gelatin silver print, 5 x 7 in. The Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (P545), CC BY-SA

At the University of Maryland, Baltimore County’s Special Collections, where I am head curator, we’ve recently completed a major digitization and...

Read more: The US has a child labor problem – recalling an embarrassing past that Americans may think they've...

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  1. 'From Magic Mushrooms to Big Pharma' – a college course explores nature's medicine cabinet and different ways of healing
  2. Never mind Cleopatra – what about the forgotten queens of ancient Nubia?
  3. Drawing, making music and writing poetry can support healing and bring more humanity to health care in US hospitals
  4. Millions of women are working during menopause, but US law isn't clear on employees' rights or employers' obligations
  5. El Niño is back – that's good news or bad news, depending on where you live
  6. Do federal or state prosecutors get to go first in trying Trump? A law professor untangles the conflict
  7. Pat Robertson's lasting influence on American politics: 3 essential reads
  8. Overcrowded trains serve as metaphor for India in Western eyes – but they are a relic of colonialism and capitalism
  9. Why a federal judge found Tennessee’s anti-drag law unconstitutional
  10. Four strategies to make your neighborhood safer
  11. Title 42 didn't result in a surge of migration, after all – but border communities are still facing record-breaking migration
  12. Republicans' anti-ESG attack may be silencing insurers, but it isn’t changing their pro-climate business decisions
  13. WHO's recommendation against the use of artificial sweeteners for weight loss leaves many questions unanswered
  14. Will faster federal reviews speed up the clean energy shift? Two legal scholars explain what the National Environmental Policy Act does and doesn't do
  15. Astrud Gilberto spread bossa nova to a welcoming world – but got little love back in Brazil
  16. What is incorruptibility? A scholar of Catholic worship explains
  17. Arrests of 3 members of an Atlanta charity's board in a SWAT-team raid is highly unusual and could be unconstitutional
  18. Cost and lack of majors are among the top reasons why students leave for-profit colleges
  19. Messi is heading to the US as Saudi Arabia kicks off bidding war with MLS for aging soccer stars
  20. Oklahoma OKs the nation's first religious charter school – but litigation is likely to follow
  21. Kakhovka dam breach raises risk for Zaporizhzhia nuclear plant – receding waters narrow options for cooling
  22. Forts Cavazos, Barfoot and Liberty — new names for army bases honor new heroes and lasting values, instead of Confederates who lost a war
  23. Brain tumors are cognitive parasites – how brain cancer hijacks neural circuits and causes cognitive decline
  24. Mounting research documents the harmful effects of social media use on mental health, including body image and development of eating disorders
  25. Mike Pence is jockeying against Donald Trump for the Republican presidential nomination – joining the ranks of just one vice president who, in 1800, also ran against a former boss
  26. The ugly side of beauty: Chemicals in cosmetics threaten college-age women's reproductive health
  27. Why insurance companies are pulling out of California and Florida, and how to fix some of the underlying problems
  28. Aztec and Maya civilizations are household names – but it's the Olmecs who are the 'mother culture' of ancient Mesoamerica
  29. This course studies NGOs aiming to help countries recover from mass atrocities and to prevent future violence
  30. Peaches are a minor part of Georgia's economy, but they're central to its mythology
  31. Nearly 20% of the cultural differences between societies boil down to ecological factors – new research
  32. Kakhovka dam breach: 3 essential reads on what it means for Ukraine's infrastructure, beleaguered nuclear plant and future war plans
  33. UK PM Sunak visits Washington to strengthen ties, watch baseball – having already struck out on trade deal
  34. US, Chinese warships' near miss in Taiwan Strait hints at ongoing troubled diplomatic waters, despite chatter about talks
  35. Changing wild animals' behavior could help save them – but is it ethical?
  36. Political compromises – like the debt-limit deal – have never been substitutes for lasting solutions
  37. Scientists' political donations reflect polarization in academia – with implications for the public's trust in science
  38. Supreme Court is poised to dismantle an integral part of LBJ's Great Society – affirmative action
  39. Historians are learning more about how the Nazis targeted trans people
  40. Blockchain is a key technology – a computer scientist explains why the post-crypto-crash future is bright
  41. 3 ways to use ChatGPT to help students learn -- and not cheat
  42. Protecting the ocean: 5 essential reads on invasive species, overfishing and other threats to sea life
  43. A community can gentrify without losing its identity -- examples from Pittsburgh, Boston and Newark of what works
  44. Several Down syndrome features may be linked to a hyperactive antiviral immune response – new research
  45. How building more backyard homes, granny flats and in-law suites can help alleviate the housing crisis
  46. Arsenic contamination of food and water is a global public health concern – researchers are studying how it causes cancer
  47. Is there life in the sea that hasn't been discovered?
  48. How hip-hop learned to call out homophobia – or at least apologize for it
  49. Sudan’s war is wrecking a lot, including its central bank – a legacy of trailblazing African American economist and banker Andrew Brimmer
  50. Saying that students embrace censorship on college campuses is incorrect -- here's how to discuss the issue more constructively