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  • A look at the 14th Amendment's Citizenship Clause

    A look at the 14th Amendment's Citizenship Clause

  • UK academic on spying charge in UAE released on bail

    Britain's Foreign Office says a U.K. academic who has been jailed in the United Arab Emirates for six months on spying allegations has been released on bail

  • Madrid goes after new coach to save its season

    The search is on for a new coach at Real Madrid

  • 11 African leaders meeting in Germany at development summit

    Chancellor Angela Merkel is meeting with the heads of 11 African nations, international organizations and corporate leaders to promiote a program launched under the German Group of 20 presidency last year designed to encourage private investment in Africa

  • Thousands demands early summoning of Sri Lankan parliament

    Thousands of Sri Lankans have marched in the capital to demand the president immediately convene Parliament to resolve a deepening political crisis following his sacking of the prime minister

  • Israel holds municipal vote, Jerusalem chooses new mayor

    Israelis are voting in for municipal elections across the country, Jerusalem choosing new mayor

  • Maldives court suspends jail term for ex-President Nasheed

    The Maldives Supreme Court has suspended a 13-year jail sentence given to the country's exiled former president until it reviews his conviction as requested by the prosecutor general

  • UK's May denies good-news budget signals an early election

    British Prime Minister Theresa May says this week's austerity-easing budget does not signal an impending election

  • US group denounces Yemeni rebels' prosecution of Baha'is

    US commission denounces Yemen's Shiite rebels for charging 24 Baha'is, including women and a teenager, with espionage

  • War crimes court's prosecutor on his first visit to Kosovo

    U.S. prosecutor Jack Smith, who heads the special prosecutor's office of a court established to prosecute crimes committed during and immediately after Kosovo's 1998-1999 war for independence, is on his first visit to Kosovo

  • The Dead Sea Scrolls are a priceless link to the Bible's past

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Daniel Falk, Pennsylvania State University(THE CONVERSATION) The Museum of the Bible in Washington, D.C., has removed five Dead Sea Scrolls from exhibits after tests confirmed these fragments were not from ancient biblical scrolls but forgeries.Over the last decade, the Green family, owners of the craft-supply chain Hobby Lobby, has paid millions of dollars for fragments of the Dead

  • Bombs are part of American political history

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Keith Brown, Arizona State University(THE CONVERSATION) The bombs allegedly sent by a passionate Trump supporter to prominent liberals last week are a reminder that American history is littered with violence, with both the left and right pursuing political ends with explosives.I’m a scholar who has researched conflict and its aftermath. From labor and anarchist unrest in the late

  • Will it be a blue wave -- or a whimper? Here's what the evidence says for the 2018 House midterm elections

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Daniel Palazzolo, University of Richmond(THE CONVERSATION) “If men were angels, no government would be necessary. If angels were to govern men, neither external nor internal controls on government would be necessary,” wrote James Madison in the Federalist Paper #51. Lacking angels, Madison asserted that elections were one of the U.S. Constitution’s checks on political power. “A

  • Pittsburgh's lesson: Hatred does not emerge in a vacuum

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Leonard Saxe, Brandeis University(THE CONVERSATION) Fueled by virulent anti-Semitism, the Sabbath peace was shattered this past weekend when 11 members of the Pittsburgh Jewish community were murdered in a synagogue where they had gathered to celebrate a birth, to pray and to study.As a scholar who studies the Jewish community and has close ties to Pittsburgh, the tragedy feels very

  • Where sexes come by the thousands

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Antonis Rokas, Vanderbilt University(THE CONVERSATION) By the end of every spring semester, students in my introductory biology course at Vanderbilt University have become quite familiar with natural variation in human sex chromosomes. They know, for example, that most females have two X chromosomes and most males have one X and one Y chromosome. But in every thousand humans, there

  • Illuminating the 'dark web'

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Robert Gehl, University of Utah(THE CONVERSATION) In the wake of recent violent events in the U.S., many people are expressing concern about the tone and content of online communications, including talk of the “dark web.” Despite the sinister-sounding phrase, there is not just one “dark web.” The term is actually fairly technical in origin, and is often used to describe some of the

  • 7 ways to teach civil discourse to students

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Tiffany Mitchell Patterson, West Virginia University(THE CONVERSATION) If young people are to engage in democracy and society, young people need to learn how to respectfully disagree. Yet, educators often find it challenging to lead discussions on contentious issues.Based on my experience as a middle school social studies educator, I’ve discovered that there are ways teachers and

  • The soundtrack of the Sixties demanded respect, justice and equality

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Michael V. Drake, The Ohio State University(THE CONVERSATION) When Sly and the Family Stone released “Everyday People” at the end of 1968, it was a rallying cry after a tumultuous year of assassinations, civil unrest and a seemingly interminable war.“We got to live together,” he sang, “I am no better and neither are you.”Throughout history, artists and songwriters have expressed a

  • How Mister Rogers’ message of love might help us now

    (The Conversation is an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.) Richard Gunderman, Indiana University(THE CONVERSATION) The Pittsburgh neighborhood in which the recent horrific mass shooting took place isn’t only the home of the Tree of Life synagogue. Squirrel Hill was also Mr. Rogers’ neighborhood, the place where he lived and ultimately chose to die in his own home. The irony is bitter indeed, because Fred McFeely Rogers, the beloved

  • 10 Things to Know for Today

    Among 10 Things to Know: Trump to visit Pittsburgh after synagogue massacre; Previous flight of doomed Indonesia jetliner terrified passengers; Official to AP: Pipe-bomb suspect had hit list of targets

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