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Does the First Amendment protect religious freedom laws?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The Boss is boycotting North Carolina.

Bruce Springsteen canceled a planned April 10 show in Greensboro to show solidarity with those protesting the passage of HB2, which bars local governments from protecting LGBT individuals against discrimination.

Bryan Adams is refusing to play in Mississippi. Adams is protesting that state’s recently...

Read more: Does the First Amendment protect religious freedom laws?

U.S. companies may need to beef up data privacy – but only for Europeans

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageCan the EU and the U.S. work together on data privacy?Gears image via shutterstock.com

Though the recent Apple versus FBI case garnered greater media attention, a privacy discussion with more economic significance – to the tune of US$260 billion – is moving toward fruition with less public attention: the EU-U.S. Privacy Shield.

To...

Read more: U.S. companies may need to beef up data privacy – but only for Europeans

TV-watching couch potatoes have outsized energy footprint

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWhen it comes to TV use energy, calling one household 'average' can be misleading. Evert F. Baumgardner - National Archives and Records Administration.

It is alluringly easy to use averages, but when most of a group is far from average, they can lead us astray. This is no less true in the area of energy consumption.

Consider for example the...

Read more: TV-watching couch potatoes have outsized energy footprint

Has Haiti's cholera epidemic become a permanent problem?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

On January 12, 2010 a 7.0 magnitude earthquake struck Haiti, killing thousands of people and displacing millions more.

Ten months later the country was stricken with an outbreak of cholera, a deadly diarrheal disease. Though the number of cholera cases has decreased from a peak of approximately 25,000 cases per month, it is likely that thousands of...

Read more: Has Haiti's cholera epidemic become a permanent problem?

For female architects, the loss of Zaha Hadid is personal

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

As a luminary in the world of architecture, Zaha Hadid, who died on March 31, was a celebrity whose name, face and buildings are known by millions.

But the grief felt by women architects is on a different, intimate scale. With Hadid’s passing, we have lost a role model in a field that has few others.

That is not to say that there are not a...

Read more: For female architects, the loss of Zaha Hadid is personal

Will the health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: maybe

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Climate change is a major public health threat, already making existing problems like asthma, exposure to extreme heat, food poisoning, and infectious disease more severe, and posing new risks from climate change-related disasters, including death or injury.

Those were the alarming conclusions of a new scientific assessment report released by the...

Read more: Will the health dangers of climate change get people to care? The science says: maybe

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