The Conversation U.S. - News written by experts to help you understand (2024)

Only 1.8% of US doctors were Black in 1906 – and the legacy of inequality in medical education has not yet been erasedBenjamin Chrisinger, Tufts University
Scientists and Indigenous leaders team up to conserve seals and an ancestral way of life at Yakutat, AlaskaAron L. Crowell, Smithsonian Institution and Judith Dax̱ootsú Ramos, University of Alaska Southeast
Scientists call the region of space influenced by the Sun the heliosphere – but without an interstellar probe, they don’t know much about its shapeSarah A. Spitzer, University of Michigan
AI search answers are the fast food of your information diet – convenient and tasty, but no substitute for good nutritionChirag Shah, University of Washington
Menopause treatments can help with hot flashes and other symptoms – but many people aren’t aware of the latest advancesNaomi Cahn, University of Virginia; Bridget J. Crawford, Pace University , and Emily Gold Waldman, Pace University
Beyond Seinfeld’s ‘Unfrosted’ – lessons from Michigan’s serial cereal entrepreneursLaurel Ofstein, Michigan State University

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New database features 250 AI tools that can enhance social science researchMegan Stubbs-Richardson, Mississippi State University; Devon Brenner, Mississippi State University; Lauren Etheredge, Mississippi State University, and MacKenzie Paul, Baylor University
Records of Pompeii’s survivors have been found – and archaeologists are starting to understand how they rebuilt their livesSteven L. Tuck, Miami University
Laws meant to keep different races apart still influence dating patterns, decades after being invalidatedSolangel Maldonado, Seton Hall University
5 reasons Supreme Court ethics questions are more common now than in the pastCharles Gardner Geyh, Indiana University
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Biden’s immigration order won’t fix problems quickly – 4 things to know about what’s changingJean Lantz Reisz, University of Southern California
Emigration: The hidden catalyst behind the rise of the radical right in Europe’s depopulating regionsRafaela Dancygier, Princeton University and David Laitin, Stanford University
All shook up? UK’s Nigel Farage is the latest to bear the brunt of pelting as popular politicsNusrat S. Chowdhury, Amherst College
Job figures are coming out, and here’s my prediction: The markets will overreact to the headlinesJeffrey Hart, Auburn University
90% of Michigan state troopers are white − why making the force more representative is a challengeAnn Marie Ryan, Michigan State University
Cities contain pockets of nature – our study shows which species are most tolerant of urbanizationJoseph Curti, University of California, Los Angeles and Morgan Tingley, University of California, Los Angeles
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Campus protests

Campus protests are part of an enduring legacy of civil disobedience improving American democracyLawrence Torcello, Rochester Institute of Technology
Divesting university endowments: Easier demanded than doneTodd L. Ely, University of Colorado Denver
5 books to help you better understand today’s campus protestsSteve Friess, University of Michigan
What students protesting Israel’s Gaza siege want — and how their demands on divestment fit into the BDS movementMira Sucharov, Carleton University
Media coverage of campus protests tends to focus on the spectacle, rather than the substanceDanielle K. Brown, Michigan State University
Read more on the protests

War in Gaza

Most Israelis dislike Netanyahu, but support the war in Gaza – an Israeli scholar explains what’s driving public opinionArie Perliger, UMass Lowell
How the Gaza humanitarian aid pier traces its origins to discarded cigar boxes before World War IIFrank A. Blazich Jr., Smithsonian Institution
Benjamin Netanyahu and Israel are becoming increasingly isolated internationally – they need to listen to their friendsJulie M Norman, UCL
Palestinian writers have long explored the horrors of amputationGraham Liddell, Hope College
A look inside the cyberwar between Israel and Hamas reveals the civilian tollRyan Shandler, Georgia Institute of Technology; Daphna Canetti, University of Haifa, and Tal Mimran, Zefat Academic College
Read more stories about the Israel-Hamas war

Jewish American Heritage Month

For American Jews, interfaith weddings are a new normal – and creatively weave both traditions togetherSamira Mehta, University of Colorado Boulder
For many American Jews protesting for Palestinians, activism is a journey rooted in their Jewish valuesAtalia Omer, University of Notre Dame
Shavuot: The Jewish holiday that became all about childrenLaura Yares, Michigan State University
Asian Jewish Americans have a double reason to celebrate their heritage in MaySamira Mehta, University of Colorado Boulder
Warsaw Ghetto’s defiant Jewish doctors secretly documented the medical effects of Nazi starvation policies in a book rediscovered on a library shelfMerry Fitzpatrick, Tufts University and Irwin Rosenberg, Tufts University
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Pictures in 500 Words

What the statue of a kneeling enslaved man in the Emancipation Memorial of 1876 tells us about its history − an art historian explainsVirginia Raguin, College of the Holy Cross
Engineering cells to broadcast their behavior can help scientists study their inner workingsScott Coyle, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Read more from our Picture in 500 Words series

Election 2024

Trump’s rhetoric after his felony conviction is designed to distract, stoke fear and ease the way for an anti-democratic strongmanKarrin Vasby Anderson, Colorado State University
Wisconsin is a key swing state this year – and has a history of being unpredictableJonathan J. Kasparek, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Trump’s lawyers in lawsuits claiming he won in 2020 are getting punished for abusing courts and making unsupported claims and false statementsElise J. Bean, Wayne State University
Read more election coverage

New research in health and science

Your favorite drink can cause breast cancer – but most women in the US aren’t aware of alcohol’s health risksMonica Swahn, Kennesaw State University and Ritu Aneja, University of Alabama at Birmingham
Female giraffes drove the evolution of long giraffe necks in order to feed on the most nutritious leaves, new research suggestsDouglas R. Cavener, Penn State
Colon cancer rates are rising in young Americans, but insurance barriers are making screening harderAndrea Shin, University of California, Los Angeles
I’m an astrophysicist mapping the universe with data from the Chandra X-ray Observatory − clear, sharp photos help me study energetic black holesGiuseppina Fabbiano, Smithsonian Institution
Phone cameras can take in more light than the human eye − that’s why low-light events like the northern lights often look better through your phone cameraDouglas Goodwin, Scripps College
Read more new science research

You might also like…

Here’s how machine learning can violate your privacyJordan Awan, Purdue University
Pets give companionship, cuddles and joy – and also unavoidable stressesEmily Hemendinger, University of Colorado Anschutz Medical Campus
TikTok law threatening a ban if the app isn’t sold raises First Amendment concernsAnupam Chander, Georgetown University and Gautam Hans, Cornell University
United Auto Workers’ defeat at Mercedes’ Alabama plants underscores challenges for organized labor in Southern statesStephen J. Silvia, American University School of International Service
Was Beethoven truly the greatest?Philip Ewell, Hunter College

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Records of Pompeii’s survivors have been found – and archaeologists are starting to understand how they rebuilt their livesSteven L. Tuck, Miami University

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Is collapse of the Atlantic Ocean circulation really imminent? Icebergs’ history reveals some cluesYuxin Zhou, University of California, Santa Barbara and Jerry McManus, Columbia University

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Trump’s prosecution is unprecedented in US – but other countries have prosecuted former leadersJames D. Long, University of Washington; Morgan Wack, Clemson University, and Victor Menaldo, University of Washington

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Does the US have a planned economy? You might be surprisedDaniel Pellathy, University of Tennessee

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Media coverage of campus protests tends to focus on the spectacle, rather than the substanceDanielle K. Brown, Michigan State University

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Hurricane forecast points to a dangerous 2024 Atlantic season, with La Niña and a persistently warm ocean teaming up to power fierce stormsJhordanne Jones, Purdue University

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