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Swimming upstream: plight of Delta smelt exposes flaws of the Endangered Species Act

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageAn icon, and perhaps casualty, of California's contentious water policies. US Fish & Wildlife Service, CC BY-SA

In July, the California Department of Fish and Wildlife made a startling announcement. Its most recent survey of the California Bay Delta netted only a handful of Delta smelt, an endangered fish species.

The...

Read more: Swimming upstream: plight of Delta smelt exposes flaws of the Endangered Species Act

Scientists score one over celebrities in battle to decriminalize sex work

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageRentboy.com is busted in New York City.Brendan McDermid/REUTERS

On August 11 2015, Amnesty International passed a historic resolution in favor of decriminalizing all consensual commercial sex work.

A few weeks earlier, the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women (CATW) – an organization that seeks to abolish...

Read more: Scientists score one over celebrities in battle to decriminalize sex work

When sex education emphasizes shame, it doesn't help youth who have been sexually abused

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageNo shame.Classroom image via www.shutterstock.com.

Sex education has long been a controversial topic in the United States. In Texas, where I work, sex education does not really exist, at least not in schools. About 47% of school districts provide nothing in terms of sex education and state-approved textbooks lack...

Read more: When sex education emphasizes shame, it doesn't help youth who have been sexually abused

Should you rely on first instincts when answering a multiple choice exam?

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageFirst instincts may not always be correct.PROCollegeDegrees360, CC BY-SA

Often, you’ll hear people say that you should “trust your instincts” when making decisions. But are first instincts always the best?

Psychological research has shown many times that no, they are often no better – any in many...

Read more: Should you rely on first instincts when answering a multiple choice exam?

Snorted, injected or smoked? It can affect a drug's addictiveness

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageAddiction isn't just about how much of a drug you take. It's also about how you take it. Drugs via www.shutterstock.com.

Many people use drugs, but not everyone becomes addicted. Why? Part of the reason comes down to how you take a drug. Are you smoking, injecting, snorting or swallowing it? That dictates how much drug gets...

Read more: Snorted, injected or smoked? It can affect a drug's addictiveness

Why we should cheer World War II operatives for Israel, but not Jonathan Pollard

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageIsraelis protest for Jonathan Pollard's release.Ammar Awad/REUTERS

Several colleagues have asked if I see any similarities between Jonathan Pollard, a US Navy Field Operational Intelligence Office employee who’ll be released from an American prison November 21 after serving 30 years for giving Israel classified...

Read more: Why we should cheer World War II operatives for Israel, but not Jonathan Pollard

How Oliver Sacks brought readers into his patients' inner worlds

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageOliver Sacks died of cancer this past week.Joshua Wanyama/flickr, CC BY-NC-SA

Oliver Sacks achieved global public renown because his writings melded two particular traits that cut across his dual role as doctor and writer: his focus on single patients rather than large populations and his profound empathy.

These uncommon...

Read more: How Oliver Sacks brought readers into his patients' inner worlds

More Articles ...

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  5. Why there is value in on-campus living
  6. The dark side of coffee: an unequal social and environmental exchange
  7. Arab Gulf states can outlast low oil prices, but expect foreign policy to shift
  8. The streak of doubt that underlies ISIS' destructive acts of religious fervor
  9. What's the psychological toll of being a Hooters waitress?
  10. Disappearing acts: reflecting on New Orleans 10 years after Katrina
  11. The New Orleans class of 2015: what it tells us and what it doesn't
  12. Is there a teaching moment in the Ashley Madison hack?
  13. New Orleans’ recovery is an inspiring and cautionary tale for American cities
  14. Lessons for media educators from the Virginia on-air shootings
  15. Does the global stock market sell-off signal the BRIC age is already over?
  16. The twilight of the superhero?
  17. We found only one-third of published psychology research is reliable – now what?
  18. Do sex and violence actually sell?
  19. Swept away: Hurricane Katrina and the New Orleans Police Department
  20. Still waiting for help: the lessons of Hurricane Katrina on poverty
  21. Back to school? A crucial time for kids' social and emotional development
  22. Activists misuse open records requests to harass researchers
  23. More audit transparency for investors makes a bitter proposal easier to swallow
  24. Weighing the impact of the Gold King Mine spill – and hundreds of inactive mines like it
  25. The Virginia on-air shootings: all too real
  26. What Don Quixote has to say to Spain about today's immigrant crisis
  27. 'Hamilton': the Broadway hip-hop musical every European leader should see
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  29. How understanding the prisoner's dilemma can help bridge liberal and conservative differences
  30. Obama, the Iran deal and Rawls' Theory of Justice
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  32. Campaign of fear: Donald Trump's battle against birthright citizenship
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  36. It's time for a more nuanced view of childhood poverty
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