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

Supreme Court unanimously concludes that anti-abortion groups have no standing to challenge access to mifepristone – but the drug likely faces more court challengesNaomi Cahn, University of Virginia and Sonia Suter, George Washington University

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An homage to the dad joke, one of the great traditions of fatherhoodIan Brodie, Cape Breton University and Moira Marsh, Indiana University
Inflation is cooling, but not fast enough for the Fed: Policymakers now expect only one rate cut in 2024Christopher Decker, University of Nebraska Omaha
The US is losing wetlands at an accelerating rate − here’s how the private sector can help protect these valuable resourcesSteph Tai, University of Wisconsin-Madison and Michael Vandenbergh, Vanderbilt University
Microrobots made of algae carry chemo directly to lung tumors, improving cancer treatmentZhengxing Li, University of California, San Diego

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Supreme Court justices secretly recorded – the legal issues and what they mean for the rest of usAnne Toomey McKenna, University of Richmond
Space weather forecasting needs an upgrade to protect future Artemis astronautsLulu Zhao, University of Michigan
People ambivalent about political issues support violence more than those with clear opinionsJoseph Siev, University of Virginia and Richard Petty, The Ohio State University
Ukraine’s draft woes leave the West facing pressure to make up for the troop shortfallNicolai N. Petro, University of Rhode Island
Philadelphia’s 200-year-old disability records show welfare reform movement’s early shift toward rationing care and punishing poor peopleNicole Lee Schroeder, Kean University
Civil rights leader James Lawson, who learned from Gandhi, used nonviolent resistance and the ‘power of love’ to challenge injusticeAnthony Siracusa, St. John Fisher University
Spikes, seat dividers, even ‘Baby Shark’ − camping bans like the one under review at SCOTUS are part of broader strategies that push out homeless peopleRobert Rosenberger, Georgia Institute of Technology
Cities with empty commercial space and housing shortages are converting office buildings into apartments – here’s what they’re learningJohn Weigand, Miami University
Scientists can’t agree on how fast the universe is expanding – why this matters so much for our understanding of the cosmosGemma Ware, The Conversation
Summertime can be germy: A microbiologist explains how to avoid getting sick at the barbecue, in the pool or on the trailBill Sullivan, Indiana University
Paris 2024 Olympics to debut high-level breakdancing – and physics in actionAmy Pope, Clemson University
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Father's Day

Fathers need to care for themselves as well as their kids – but often don’tDerek M. Griffith, Georgetown University and Elizabeth C. Stewart, Vanderbilt University
What Greek epics taught me about the special relationship between fathers and sonsJoel Christensen, Brandeis University
From ‘dada’ to Darth Vader – why the way we name fathers reminds us we spring from the same wellValerie M. Fridland, University of Nevada, Reno
Fatherhood changes men’s brains, according to before-and-after MRI scansDarby Saxbe, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences and Magdalena Martínez García, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Gregorio Marañón IiSGM
Brain study identifies a cost of caregiving for new fathersDarby Saxbe, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences
Read more on Father's Day

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

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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

Elections around the world

Politics is still both local and personal – but only for independents, not for Democrats or RepublicansShanna Pearson-Merkowitz, University of Maryland and Joshua J. Dyck, UMass Lowell
Indian election was awash in deepfakes – but AI was a net positive for democracyVandinika Shukla, Harvard Kennedy School and Bruce Schneier, Harvard Kennedy School
UK and US elections: 2 very different systems united by a common political languageGarret Martin, American University School of International Service
2020’s ‘fake elector’ schemes will be harder to try in 2024 – but not impossibleDerek T. Muller, University of Notre Dame
Mexico elects first female president − but will that improve the lot of country’s women?Xavier Medina Vidal, University of Texas at Arlington and Christopher Chambers-Ju, University of Texas at Arlington
Read more global election coverage

New research in health and science

Wastewater surveillance reveals pathogens in Detroit’s population, helping monitor and predict disease outbreaks since 2017Irene Xagoraraki, Michigan State University
Losing winter ice is changing the Great Lakes food web – here’s how light is shaping life underwaterSteven Wilhelm, University of Tennessee; Brittany Zepernick, University of Tennessee, and Robert Michael McKay, University of Windsor
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
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
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
Read more new science research

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NASA’s asteroid sample mission gave scientists around the world the rare opportunity to study an artificial meteorBrian Elbing, Oklahoma State University and Elizabeth A. Silber, Sandia National Laboratories
AI search answers are the fast food of your information diet – convenient and tasty, but no substitute for good nutritionChirag Shah, University of Washington
How much do you need to know about how your spouse spends money? Maybe less than you thinkScott Rick, University of Michigan
Beyond Seinfeld’s ‘Unfrosted’ – lessons from Michigan’s serial cereal entrepreneursLaurel Ofstein, Michigan State University
Laws meant to keep different races apart still influence dating patterns, decades after being invalidatedSolangel Maldonado, Seton Hall University

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

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Jan 8, 2024

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