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The Conversation

Fear, hope and the economy: what is motivating Americans as they decide who to vote for – podcast

  • Written by Gemma Ware, Head of Audio, The Conversation UK

Amid deep political polarization and extreme campaign rhetoric, the U.S. presidential election on November 5 is likely to be decided by a small number of voters in swing states such as Pennsylvania and Michigan. But why is it so close?

In this episode of The Conversation Weekly podcast, Naomi Schalit, senior politics editor at the The Conversation...

Read more: Fear, hope and the economy: what is motivating Americans as they decide who to vote for – podcast

Slow vote-counting, flip-flopping leads, careful certification and the weirdness of the Electoral College – people who research elections look at what to expect on election night

  • Written by Jeff Inglis, Politics + Society Editor, The Conversation US
imageWhat should you make of the flood of information about the election?Dilok Klaisataporn/iStock / Getty Images Plus

As Election Day arrives, people’s feelings of eagerness and anxiety can intensify. It’s normal to want to know the results, but it’s also important to make sure that when the results are announced, they’re...

Read more: Slow vote-counting, flip-flopping leads, careful certification and the weirdness of the Electoral...

‘Each bears his own ghosts’: How the classics speak to these days of fear, anger and presidential candidates stalking the land

  • Written by Rachel Hadas, Professor of English, Rutgers University - Newark

“Fear stalks the land, including the Upper West Side,” I wrote to a friend the other day. A week before the election, everyone seems to be afraid.

Not that we’re afraid of the same things. Newspaper owners and corporate leaders fear Donald Trump’s retribution if they endorse Kamala Harris. Election workers fear the mob....

Read more: ‘Each bears his own ghosts’: How the classics speak to these days of fear, anger and presidential...

A new president will be elected − but it may take some time to determine who wins

  • Written by John M. Murphy, Professor of Communication, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

For more than 100 years, media of many kinds tried to be the first to report presidential election results. Although that urge still exists, pundits and analysts are now more concerned with accuracy than speed.

That’s because of the 2020 election. A raging pandemic, a divided country, a close race, polling failures, false presidential claims...

Read more: A new president will be elected − but it may take some time to determine who wins

The ‘Courage Tour’ is attempting to get Christians to vote for Trump − and focused on defeating ‘demons’

  • Written by Michael E. Heyes, Associate Professor and Chair of Religion, Lycoming College
imageEvangelist Lance Wallnau addresses people at the 'Courage Tour' rally. Michael E. Heyes, CC BY

As a scholar of religion, I attended the “Courage Tour,” a series of religious-political rallies, when it made a stop in Monroeville, Pennsylvania, from Sept. 27-28, 2024.

From what I observed, the various speakers on the tour used...

Read more: The ‘Courage Tour’ is attempting to get Christians to vote for Trump − and focused on defeating...

Religion in the workplace is tricky – but employers and employees both lose when it becomes a total taboo

  • Written by Christopher P. Scheitle, Associate Professor of Sociology, West Virginia University
imageMany offices make a point to celebrate diversity, but what does that look like when it comes to faith?FatCamera/E+ via Getty Images

Since we spend so much of our lives at our jobs, it’s only natural that conversations with colleagues go beyond the work in front of us. People share interests and hobbies, family struggles, health concerns, and...

Read more: Religion in the workplace is tricky – but employers and employees both lose when it becomes a...

Simple science summaries written by AI help people understand research and trust scientists

  • Written by David Markowitz, Associate Professor of Communication, Michigan State University
imageSmoothing out the complexity can help with comprehension.kislev/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Artificial intelligence-generated summaries of scientific papers make complex information more understandable for the public compared with human-written summaries, according to my recent paper published in PNAS Nexus. AI-generated summaries not only...

Read more: Simple science summaries written by AI help people understand research and trust scientists

Fighting antibiotic resistance at the source – using machine learning to identify bacterial resistance genes and the drugs to block them

  • Written by Abdullahi Tunde Aborode, Mississippi State University
imageCurrent methods of identifying resistance mutations in microbes can miss other ways resistance can develop.koto_feja/iStock via Getty Images Plus

Antibiotic resistance is a growing public health problem around the world. When bacteria like E. coli no longer respond to antibiotics, infections become harder to treat.

To develop new antibiotics,...

Read more: Fighting antibiotic resistance at the source – using machine learning to identify bacterial...

Scholar’s new rap album seeks to turn the tables on the ‘masters’ from the Old South

  • Written by A.D. Carson, Associate Professor of Hip-Hop, University of Virginia
imageCould the path to the Ph.D. run through the recording studio?Ratchapon Supprasert via iStock / Getty Images Plus

Usually when a rap artist comes out with a new album, it’s released by a record label as part of their career as an entertainer. For Dr. A.D. Carson, a professor of hip-hop at the University of Virginia, his latest album –...

Read more: Scholar’s new rap album seeks to turn the tables on the ‘masters’ from the Old South

Time to freak out? How the existential terror of hurricanes can fuel climate change denial

  • Written by Jamie Goldenberg, Professor of Psychology and Area Director, Cognitive, Neuroscience and Social Psychology, University of South Florida
imageHurricane Milton flooded parts of the Tampa Bay region just days after Hurricane Helene made landfall nearby.Bryan R. Smithy/AFP via Getty Images

As TVs across Florida broadcast the all-too-familiar images of a powerful hurricane headed for the coast in early October 2024, people whose homes had been damaged less than two weeks earlier by Hurricane...

Read more: Time to freak out? How the existential terror of hurricanes can fuel climate change denial

More Articles ...

  1. People with blindness and low vision are squeezed by high costs of living − new research
  2. What the presidential candidates have done − and where they stand − on education
  3. Nationalism is not patriotism: 3 insights from Orwell about Trump and the 2024 election
  4. Why vote for Harris or Trump? A cheat sheet on the candidates’ records, why their supporters like them and why picking one or the other makes sense
  5. Misinformation is more than just bad facts: How and why people spread rumors is key to understanding how false information travels and takes root
  6. Abortion and marijuana ballot measures may bring out Florida Democrats, but the GOP has 1M more active voters in the Sunshine State
  7. Why Pennsylvania’s election results will take time to count
  8. Defender su voto: Pasos a seguir si su derecho al voto es cuestionado el día de las elecciones
  9. Cannabis legalization may hit a ‘red wall’ at the ballot box
  10. Making a Snickers bar is a complex science − a candy engineer explains how to build the airy nougat and chewy caramel of this Halloween favorite
  11. The ancient Irish get far too much credit for Halloween
  12. Grow fast, die young? Animals that invest in building high-quality biomaterials may slow aging and increase their lifespans
  13. On foreign policy, Trump opts for disruption and Harris for engagement − but they share some of the same concerns
  14. Beyond bottled water and sandwiches: What FEMA is doing to get hurricane victims back into their homes
  15. How Trump’s racist talk of immigrant ‘bad genes’ echoes some of the last century’s darkest ideas about eugenics
  16. Corporate social responsibility disclosures are a double-edged sword, new research suggests
  17. RFK Jr.’s pivot to Trump is a journey taken by many populists swept along the left-to-right alternative media pipeline
  18. For an estimated 4 million people with felony convictions, restoring their right to vote is complicated – and varies state by state
  19. Israel’s ban on UNRWA continues a pattern of politicizing Palestinian refugee aid – and puts millions of lives at risk
  20. Rising partisanship is making nonprofits more reluctant to engage in policy debates − new research
  21. What to do if your vote is challenged: Practical advice from a civil rights attorney for Election Day
  22. My family lived the horrors of Native American boarding schools – why Biden’s apology doesn’t go far enough
  23. Vampire bats – look beyond the fangs and blood to see animal friendships and unique adaptations
  24. LGBTQ+ voters in these 4 states could swing the 2024 presidential election
  25. Michiganders or Michiganians? A linguist explains why the answer is clear
  26. Trump’s anti-Haitian rhetoric reflects America’s long-standing racism against Haiti and its people
  27. Why do we use gasoline for small vehicles and diesel fuel for big vehicles?
  28. US math teachers view student performance differently based on race and gender
  29. Why donors should ask local communities what matters to them while deciding what success looks like
  30. Israel’s latest strike against Iran may actually de-escalate regional tensions – for now, at least
  31. We analyzed 9 years of Trump political speeches, and his violent rhetoric has increased dramatically
  32. Animals that are all black or all white have reputations based on superstition − biases that have real effects
  33. Hamas at a crossroads: Sinwar’s death leaves a vacuum; Israeli actions make it harder to fill with a moderate
  34. Mexico’s Day of the Dead celebrations blend Indigenous customs and European thinking in surprising ways
  35. The best horror movie you’ve never seen
  36. Threatening ‘the enemy within’ with force: Military ethicists explain the danger to important American traditions
  37. Debates about Columbus’ Spanish Jewish ancestry are not new − the claim was once a bid for social acceptance
  38. Student-athletes find more power in the changing legal landscape of college sports
  39. From Confederate general to Cherokee heritage: Why returning the name Kuwohi to the Great Smoky Mountains matters
  40. Foreign countries are helping autocracies repress exiled dissidents in return for economic gain
  41. Horror movies are as much a mainstay of Halloween as trick or treat − but why are they so bloody?
  42. Why is Halloween spending growing when Americans are supposedly cutting back?
  43. Florida’s new condo laws recognize the total price of living on the beach
  44. Doctors are preoccupied with threats of criminal charges in states with abortion bans, putting patients’ lives at risk
  45. Expanding abortion access strengthens democracy, while abortion bans signal broader repression − worldwide study
  46. Is America ready for a woman president? Voters’ attitudes to women politicians are radically different from a decade ago
  47. Your politics can affect whether you click on sponsored search results, new research shows
  48. Your next favorite story won’t be written by AI – but it could be someday
  49. Tiny airborne particles within air pollution could be a silent killer – new study uncovers hidden risks and reveals who’s most at risk in New York state
  50. Proof that immigrants fuel the US economy is found in the billions they send back home