The Conversation
- A scholar of gender and US religious history explains how women are trying to make religious communities more inclusive. Women’s ordination is only one piece of this ongoing work.
- Researchers have crafted a COVID-19 Aerosol Transmission Estimator for people to discover their risk of catching coronavirus for any given situation.
- Gangs have changed in the decades since ‘West Side Story’ first came out—they are deadlier, and their demographics are different—as are the means law enforcement use to control them.
- Figuring out whether to celebrate holidays, and how, is tricky for lots of interfaith families—but thoughtful communication makes a difference
- Is COVID-19 here to stay? A team of biologists explains what it means for a virus to become endemicThe contagious nature of SARS-CoV-2 and our highly interconnected society constitute a perfect storm that will likely contribute to sustained virus spread, researchers find
- New data suggests that lots of time on screens may even improve peer relationships. But the study comes with caveats.
- ¾«Æ·SMÔÚÏßӰƬ research finds that carrying a pregnancy to term is riskier than having an abortion, especially for non-Hispanic Black women.
- Religious calendars and festivals can force people to encounter certain ideas in the year.
- As soaring heat exposes artifacts that provide insights into ancient climate resilience and other important scientific data, the ice loss itself is reducing humanity’s resilience for the years ahead.
- As statistics continues to play an ever more important role in society, equal access to data resources in developing countries is becoming more essential.