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Why are buttons and zippers on different sides of men’s and women’s clothes?

  • Written by JuYoung Lee, Associate Professor of Fashion Design and Merchandising, Mississippi State University
imageIs the person wearing the clothes fastening their own buttons?kampee patisena/Moment via Getty Images

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.


Why are zippers on different sides of male and female jackets? – Agrima, age 13,...

Read more: Why are buttons and zippers on different sides of men’s and women’s clothes?

Nonprofit fraud: Amid high-profile prosecutions, an accountant explains what’s really going on

  • Written by Sarah Webber, Associate Professor of Accounting, University of Dayton
imageStefan Pildes was charged in April 2026, in New York, with wire fraud for allegedly taking money destined for charities.AP Photo/Larry Neumeister

Nonprofit fraud is in the news a lot these days.

Federal investigators in Minnesota prosecuted one of the largest alleged COVID-19 pandemic fraud schemes, in which several nonprofits and individuals are...

Read more: Nonprofit fraud: Amid high-profile prosecutions, an accountant explains what’s really going on

Soaring ticket prices could help FIFA pull in $15B this World Cup cycle — where does the money come from, where does it go?

  • Written by Richard Sheehan, Professor Emeritus of Business and Economics, University of Notre Dame
imageFIFA's secondary ticket market can be seen on a smartphone screen. Maximilian Haupt / picture alliance via Getty Images

At soccer’s World Cup, the top scorer gets the “golden boot,” and the best goalkeeper is handed the “golden gloves.” This year’s tournament will also provide organizer FIFA with a golden...

Read more: Soaring ticket prices could help FIFA pull in $15B this World Cup cycle — where does the money...

The US Constitution and laws do not protect oil companies from being sued over the harm they cause to the climate

  • Written by Alejandro E. Camacho, Professor of Law, University of California, Los Angeles
imageAcross the U.S., people are calling for companies to pay for the damage they have done to the environment.Alex Kent/AFP via Getty Images

In recent years, at least two dozen local and state governments have sued petroleum companies to recover the billions in costs they have incurred responding to and rebuilding after flooding, storms and wildfires...

Read more: The US Constitution and laws do not protect oil companies from being sued over the harm they cause...

SpaceX is poised to go public and test the latest version of its massive Starship rocket amidst criticism about its environmental impact

  • Written by Scott Solomon, Teaching Professor of BioSciences, Rice University
imageAn earlier version of SpaceX's Starship rocket launched from the Starbase facility in Boca Chica, Texas during a test in November 2024. AP Photo/Eric Gay

SpaceX is proceeding with two major milestones with consequences that could be, at a minimum, global. The company, owned by Elon Musk and valued at upwards of US$1.5 trillion, released its...

Read more: SpaceX is poised to go public and test the latest version of its massive Starship rocket amidst...

Long COVID will cost the US an estimated $8 billion over just 3 years due to healthcare burden, managing symptoms and loss to the workforce

  • Written by Bruce Y. Lee, Professor of Health Policy and Management, City University of New York
imageLosses in workplace productivity account for more than 90% of the estimate.aire images/Moment via Getty ImagesimageThe Conversation, CC-BY-ND.

Headlines on long COVID have become much more rare than during the first few years of the COVID-19 pandemic.

But that doesn’t mean the more than 44 million Americans who have at some point reported long...

Read more: Long COVID will cost the US an estimated $8 billion over just 3 years due to healthcare burden,...

Where will money for the ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’ come from? This man has been warning of Judgment Fund abuse for years

  • Written by Paul Figley, Emeritus Professor of Legal Rhetoric, American University
imageA big pot of taxpayer money likely destined for Donald Trump's allies has created an uproar.Mensent Photography/Getty Images

The creation of an “Anti-Weaponization Fund” at the Department of Justice may have shocked a lot of people, but not Paul Figley, a legal scholar and former DOJ staffer who has spent years warning that taxpayer...

Read more: Where will money for the ‘Anti-Weaponization Fund’ come from? This man has been warning of...

The ‘warrior ethos’ promises victory — history says it leads to defeat

  • Written by John Broich, Associate Professor of History, Case Western Reserve University
imageHitler and Mussolini salute Nazi troops in 1937.Bettmann/Getty Images

At Marine Corps Base Quantico in September 2025, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth promised assembled generals “maximum lethality” and no “stupid rules of engagement.” Under his leadership, the newly rebranded Department of War would “untie the hands of...

Read more: The ‘warrior ethos’ promises victory — history says it leads to defeat

The war in Iran – again – points to the strategic shortcomings of assassination as policy of foreign affairs

  • Written by Brian O'Neill, Professor of Practice, International Affairs, Georgia Institute of Technology
imageIranians hold their guns during a pro-government gathering near the residence where former Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was killed. AP Photo/Vahid Salemi

The coordinated U.S.-Israeli strikes at the outset of the war in Iran killed Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei, along with other key regime figures. In doing so, the United States and...

Read more: The war in Iran – again – points to the strategic shortcomings of assassination as policy of...

More universities are disinviting commencement speakers who might challenge students’ ideas, unraveling an apolitical tradition

  • Written by Austin Sarat, William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Jurisprudence and Political Science, Amherst College
imageCollege commencement ceremonies celebrate students' achievements, but also have become occasionally fraught with politics. photosbyjim/iStock/Getty Images Plus

Delivering a university commencement address used to simply be a unique kind of honor. Speakers stand before a podium, wearing a traditional graduation cap and robe, and offer graduates...

Read more: More universities are disinviting commencement speakers who might challenge students’ ideas,...

More Articles ...

  1. When a president settles his own lawsuit to create a fund for allies, fundamental questions about justice arise
  2. As goes CBS Radio News, so goes the idea that news media should serve the public interest
  3. How employers can support workers when they take medical leave
  4. Transgender youth and their families struggle to find gender-affirming care – even in states where it’s still legal
  5. EPA is sidelining its independent chemical referee – and that endangers public health
  6. Quantum sensors use atoms, electrons and light as ultra-steady rulers – detecting faint motion, magnetism and gravity for navigation, medicine and science
  7. Solar activity follows an 11-year cycle – here’s how it controls eruptions and solar flares
  8. For the first time in a decade, the next election could be less secure than the one preceding it
  9. How you map numbers in your mind isn’t universal, even among people who read the same language
  10. Philadelphia will celebrate Ona Judge Day to honor Martha Washington’s enslaved maid who made a daring escape to freedom
  11. Special courts helps veterans stay out of jail - but staffing losses at VA and cuts to government programs are threatening their work
  12. What Jefferson and Madison would have thought about ‘rededicating’ the US to God
  13. 5 reasons Stephen Colbert is one of the most important satirists in American history
  14. San Diego mosque shooting reflects how online rhetoric, media depictions and political discourse contribute to increased Islamophobia
  15. New SNAP rules requiring that benefits be used at stores selling healthier food could backfire
  16. Formula 1 racing shows the hard part of reaching net-zero carbon emissions isn’t the engineering
  17. How a shifting Nile landscape shaped the rise of the ancient empire of Kush in Sudan
  18. Texas Tech’s new limits on how faculty teach gender identity and sexual orientation challenge more than free speech
  19. AI interviewers can’t connect with people the way human researchers can – they can produce only data, not meaning
  20. Self-censorship, more stress, tougher recruiting – we asked US researchers how the Trump administration’s science policies have affected them
  21. Ebola strain spreading in Congo and Uganda has no approved vaccine
  22. Battleground state with few combatants – why Pennsylvania’s primaries lack competition
  23. Hurricane forecasts have improved dramatically, saving lives, but federal cuts threaten to stretch NOAA to the breaking point
  24. Hurricane forecasts have improved dramatically, saving lives, but federal cuts threaten to stretch NOAA resources to breaking point
  25. Antonia Bembo fled Venice to escape her abusive husband – over three centuries later, her opera finally takes the stage
  26. Dark patterns on the web are designed to manipulate you – why aren’t they all illegal?
  27. What are those orange balls on some power lines?
  28. Flavored vapes led to a major shake-up at the FDA – 3 health policy analysts explain the science behind the controversial products
  29. Uncovering coded antisemitism online takes both human expertise and AI automation
  30. A newly rediscovered moth species in Florida may already be at risk
  31. Companies are hyping AI the same way they talked up sustainability, but there are ways to fix that
  32. Trump’s Cabinet dramatically changed American foreign policy while the president made noise – a scholar of presidential rhetoric explains
  33. Why the Iran war is breaking the US-European strategic alliance
  34. From beef ribs to a ‘heavenly’ walk: Xi-Trump summit symbolism underscored American power and Chinese tradition
  35. Supreme Court preserves access to mifepristone via telehealth – at least for now
  36. Trump-Xi summit: Cautious progress on trade, ties and some ‘win-wins’
  37. You can persuade AI models to accept falsehoods as truth, study shows
  38. Is baby talk bad? Why ‘parentese’ actually helps babies learn language
  39. A fungal disease, along with climate change, threatens Colorado’s prized peaches
  40. AI-generated fantasies of US intervention reveal how desperation has narrowed Cuba’s political horizons
  41. Would a $1 rideshare fee affect wealthier or working-class Philadelphians more? 2 Chicago studies offer some perspective
  42. From medieval plague ships to hantavirus: How outbreaks at sea helped to shape the international public health system
  43. More than just a critical blow to Keir Starmer and Labour, local votes signal a dis-United Kingdom
  44. America’s musical founding father: ‘Liberty songs’ by a self-taught singer and tanner helped fuel the Revolution
  45. Who shops at farmers markets in the US?
  46. A ‘super El Niño?’ Why it’s too early to forecast one with certainty, but not too soon to prepare
  47. How much is a bat worth? Protecting these tiny insect-eaters isn’t just good for farms – their deaths cost taxpayers and the wider economy
  48. Why a growing number of Trump supporters are experiencing voter’s remorse
  49. Astrophysicists use ‘space archaeology’ to trace the history of a spiral galaxy
  50. Will future missions to the Moon be sustainable? It may depend on whom you ask