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Europe's failed response to refugee crisis risks fraying local labor markets

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageThere's no end in sight to the wave of refugees seeking solace in Europe.Reuters

Europe’s refugee crisis neither began nor ended when the body of a Kurdish boy was found washed up on a Turkish beach in September.

In all, he was just one of 3,770 people who lost their lives in 2015 as over a million people crossed into Europe fleeing wars in...

Read more: Europe's failed response to refugee crisis risks fraying local labor markets

How Chinese mix of frugality and risk-taking is driving global stock markets wild

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageFacing a sea of red.Reuters

Plunging Chinese stocks have been sending worsening ripples across global markets all year, prompting fears of spillovers and recessions.

China’s Shanghai Composite Index lost 8 percent last week alone and is down more than 20 percent since a recent high in December, putting it in bear-market territory. That slide...

Read more: How Chinese mix of frugality and risk-taking is driving global stock markets wild

California's Aliso Canyon methane leak: climate disaster or opportunity?

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageLooking for relief: Southern California Gas Company and outside experts work on a relief well at the Aliso Canyon designed to stop the ongoing natural gas leak. Dean Musgrove/Reuters

This October, a large leak was discovered at the Aliso Canyon natural gas storage facility in northwest Los Angeles. The leak is a serious health risk to nearby...

Read more: California's Aliso Canyon methane leak: climate disaster or opportunity?

Picasso the...sculptor? Disputed purchase brings attention to lesser-known aspect of his art

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imagePablo Picasso's Bull (1958) is constructed with plywood, tree branch, nails and screws. © 2015 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.

A legal battle has erupted between art dealer Larry Gagosian and the royal family of Qatar, with each side claiming to have purchased a Picasso statue from Picasso’s daughter...

Read more: Picasso the...sculptor? Disputed purchase brings attention to lesser-known aspect of his art

Mental health care for prisoners could prevent rearrest, but prisons aren't designed for rehabilitation

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageInmates walk outside their cells at San Quentin State Prison in June 2012.Lucy Nicholson/Reuters

Mental health conditions are more common among prisoners than in the general population. Estimates suggest that as many as 26 percent of state and federal prisoners suffer from at least one mental illness, compared with nine percent or less in the...

Read more: Mental health care for prisoners could prevent rearrest, but prisons aren't designed for...

New genetically engineered American chestnut will help restore the decimated, iconic tree

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageTransgenic American chestnuts could soon take root.Claire Dunn, CC BY-ND

American chestnut trees were once among the most majestic hardwood trees in the eastern deciduous forests, many reaching 80 to 120 feet in height and eight feet or more in diameter.

imageHistoric picture of a large American chestnut tree (Ten Eyck Dewitt barns, Paul Farm, NY).Provide...

Read more: New genetically engineered American chestnut will help restore the decimated, iconic tree

U.S. laws protect police, while endangering civilians

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageDemonstrators confront police officers in Chicago after Laquan McDonald was fatally shot. REUTERS/Andrew Nelles

In the sixth GOP debate, Donald Trump told Americans: “The police are the most mistreated people in this country.”

On the same day, the Chicago Police Department released a video showing an officer killing Cedric Chatman in...

Read more: U.S. laws protect police, while endangering civilians

Fulfilling Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream: the role for higher education

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageWho is responsible for today's campus troubles?Jonathan Ernst/Reuters

Fifty years ago, Martin Luther King Jr. wrote “Why We Can’t Wait” to dispel the notion that African Americans should be content to proceed on an incremental course toward full equality under the law and in the wider society. King observed,

Three hundred years of...

Read more: Fulfilling Martin Luther King Jr.'s dream: the role for higher education

More Articles ...

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