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The Conversation

Stay informed with The Conversation’s coverage and analysis.

Nia Long, Larenz Tate
Lifestyle
I studied ‘The Love Jones Cohort’ and found it was real: More Black Americans with higher education are choosing bachelorhood over settling down
By Kris Marsh and The ConversationApril 6, 2023
Student reporter
Success
The local news crisis is so bad that college students are replacing statehouse reporters from ‘ghost papers’
By Richard Watts and The ConversationApril 6, 2023
Angel Reese, Caitlin Clark
Success
How the first lady’s invitation to the losers of the women’s college basketball final kicked off a firestorm, according to a scholar of sport and race
By Joseph N. Cooper and The ConversationApril 5, 2023
Apps like Venmo and Square are making it easier for the IRS to crack down on side hustles — Don’t get caught off guard on your taxes
Personal Finance
Apps like Venmo and Square are making it easier for the IRS to crack down on side hustles — Don’t get caught off guard on your taxes
By Erica Neuman and The ConversationApril 4, 2023
Craig Blair
Environment
Congress is allowing millions of Americans to drink toxic chemicals because it won’t regulate fracking: study
By Vivian R. Underhill, Lourdes Vera and The ConversationApril 3, 2023
Person staring at computer
Tech
The robots are here and the pleasure seekers are going to fall in love with AI, say experts who studied machine-human bonding
By Marco Dehnert, Joris Van Ouytsel and The ConversationApril 3, 2023
Audits, ‘soft laws’ and ‘automation bias’: 3 experts break down what it could take to regulate AI and how hard it will be
Tech
Audits, ‘soft laws’ and ‘automation bias’: 3 experts break down what it could take to regulate AI and how hard it will be
By S. Shyam Sundar, Cason Schmit, John Villasenor and The ConversationApril 3, 2023
Eating disorders among teens have more than doubled during the pandemic. Here are the warning signs and what to do about them
Family
Eating disorders among teens have more than doubled during the pandemic. Here are the warning signs and what to do about them
By Sydney Hartman-Munick and The ConversationApril 1, 2023
A law professor breaks down Trump’s complex legal situation and explains how this case is different than any other
Politics
A law professor breaks down Trump’s complex legal situation and explains how this case is different than any other
By Jeffrey Bellin and The ConversationMarch 31, 2023
Baseball’s new shot clock is either a brazen sellout or remarkable piece of ignorance, says the philosopher who wrote ‘Infinite Baseball’
Success
Baseball’s new shot clock is either a brazen sellout or remarkable piece of ignorance, says the philosopher who wrote ‘Infinite Baseball’
By Alva Noë and The ConversationMarch 31, 2023
Cesar Chavez
Success
How Cesar Chavez fused community organizing with Catholicism to become a labor icon, according to a scholar of religion
By Lloyd Daniel Barba and The ConversationMarch 31, 2023
Donald Trump can still run for president after his indictment—and even govern from jail
Politics
Donald Trump can still run for president after his indictment—and even govern from jail
By Stefanie Lindquist and The ConversationMarch 30, 2023
Today’s management-speak has a lot in common with 1930s Soviet propaganda—and it’s making people miserable
Success
Today’s management-speak has a lot in common with 1930s Soviet propaganda—and it’s making people miserable
By Bogdan Costea, Peter Watt and The ConversationMarch 30, 2023
Stone Town, Zanzibar
Health
2 of the scientists who worked on the first ancient Swahili DNA analysis say the results weren’t African or Asian—they were both
By The ConversationMarch 30, 2023
Some advice for the new head of a World Bank is inheriting a slew of problems and a dysfunctional corporate culture
Finance
Some advice for the new head of a World Bank is inheriting a slew of problems and a dysfunctional corporate culture
By Rachel Kyte and The ConversationMarch 30, 2023
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Big Tech
As Big Tech showers employees with perks to win the talent war, Nvidia built a nearly $5 trillion company by making people pay for their own lunchplaceholder alt text
By Marco Quiroz-GutierrezJuly 1, 2026
Success
MacKenzie Scott alone accounted for one-third of America's $19.2 billion in megagifts last yearplaceholder alt text
By Sydney LakeJune 25, 2026
Personal Finance
Current price of oil as of July 1, 2026placeholder alt text
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