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If Goldwater can win the GOP nomination, why not Trump?

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageChatting up the party fateful. Jonathan Ernst/REUTERS

As the primary season heats up, few believe he can win the GOP nomination. The establishment choice is a shoo-in, but the upstart candidate believes the country is on the wrong path, well on its way to losing its greatness. The newcomer promises to reclaim America for...

Read more: If Goldwater can win the GOP nomination, why not Trump?

How advertising research explains Donald Trump's profound appeal

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageWhy are people so drawn to Trump?Lucas Jackson/Reuters

Politics and advertising are closely intertwined. Like a good advertisement, a good politician needs to present a compelling case for why the voter should check his or her box on the ballot over all the other options.

Many good ads or politicians will make a direct...

Read more: How advertising research explains Donald Trump's profound appeal

Stem cells could help mend a broken heart, but they've got to mature

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageHeart cells showing damage after a heart attack.Nephron, CC BY-SA

Heart disease is the number one cause of death in the US. The most common type is coronary heart disease, which occurs when there’s a buildup of plaque within the heart’s blood vessels. Smoking, diabetes, obesity and high blood pressure can all...

Read more: Stem cells could help mend a broken heart, but they've got to mature

Local fishing rights + marine reserves: a better approach to small-scale fisheries recovery

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageSamal, Philippines: protected area to manage fish recovery. Rare, CC BY-SA

From the big, stilted offshore guardhouse overlooking one of the six fishery replenishment zones in Bindoy, Philippines, local volunteer guards keep a 24/7 watch against illegal fishing. Recently, a hopeful sign has caught the guards’...

Read more: Local fishing rights + marine reserves: a better approach to small-scale fisheries recovery

Should the Fed raise rates? Wrong question – here's the right one

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageFed Chair Janet Yellen's rates balancing act would be easier if the government got in the game.Reuters

The big question these days is when the Federal Reserve will finally raise its target interest rate for the first time in almost a decade. Its monetary policy committee is meeting this week to decide whether to do just...

Read more: Should the Fed raise rates? Wrong question – here's the right one

It's true. It matters when professors know their students' names

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageWhat will make students have faith in their professors?Jeremy Wilburn, CC BY-NC-ND

The new academic year is off to a start, and thousands of students have entered college for the first time.

I’ve been teaching college students for a long time, but this year, two developments have led me to think hard about my role as a...

Read more: It's true. It matters when professors know their students' names

If we burned all fossil fuels, would any of Antartica's ice survive?

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageHow much staying power? A calving front of the Antarctic ice sheet.NASA/Jim Yungel, CC BY-SA

Here is a great ‘what-if’: If we (the human race) were to burn all available fossil fuels, could we melt the largest and most stable ice sheet on the planet – Antarctica? Could our collective industrial impacts on...

Read more: If we burned all fossil fuels, would any of Antartica's ice survive?

Our prosperity is in peril unless we shift from a wasteful world to a 'circular economy'

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageWhat a waste.Landfill via www.shutterstock.com

The prosperity that we are enjoying today could largely be attributed to the industrial revolution of the 18th and early 19th centuries. Yet this enhancement of our standard of living has come at a steep price: the creation of the so-called linear economy.

In other words, we...

Read more: Our prosperity is in peril unless we shift from a wasteful world to a 'circular economy'

Fourteen years after 9/11, Obama still struggles to close Guantanamo Bay

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageThe Northeast gate out of Gitmo and into Cuba, 2013. Bob Strong/REUTERS

Even prior to his inauguration, Barack Obama said that during his first week in office as president of the United States, he would issue an executive order closing the Guantanamo Bay detention facility. However, he cautiously hedged by adding the...

Read more: Fourteen years after 9/11, Obama still struggles to close Guantanamo Bay

Inside academia: black professors are expected to 'entertain' while presenting

  • Written by The Conversation

Authors: The Conversation

imageEntertainers or performers?Shawn, CC BY-NC

Imagine this scenario: after going through the frustrations of being a high school mathematics teacher, you went back to school for a PhD and landed your dream job.

Today, you are an assistant professor at one of the top education departments within a university system that is...

Read more: Inside academia: black professors are expected to 'entertain' while presenting

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  8. From Jimmy Carter to Donald Trump in four short decades
  9. Why dress and appearance matter at black colleges
  10. Stephen Colbert's Late Show feasts on political fare
  11. The Common Core is today's New Math – which is actually a good thing
  12. When it comes to academic quality, Europeans show the way
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