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US Edition | 26 January 2021
The Conversation
Academic rigor, journalistic flair
I’ve lived in New York City off and on since I moved here for grad school in 2005. From the bars and restaurants to the 24-hour subway and Central Park, the city has always enthralled and inspired me. Even its downsides – the smells, the nonstop traffic and noise, pizza rats – have become reasons for loving the city all the more, like the way a partner’s most annoying habits grow oddly endearing.
That’s why it was startling to see NYC brought to a standstill last spring when the pandemic struck. Even now, my favorite hangouts remain shuttered, and the subway that services the “city that never sleeps” closes at 1 a.m. At least Central Park remains open for weekend runs, albeit masked. Many like me, upon seeing their beloved cities imperiled by a virus that flourishes in density as much as we do, are wondering: Can the city survive COVID-19?
Reassuringly, the answer is “yes.” Or so believe urban experts John Rennie Short of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and Michael Orlando of the University of Colorado, Denver, who have weighed in on what the post-pandemic future holds for cities.
Also today:
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Cities are breeding grounds for creativity – and infectious diseases. Salvator Barki/Moment via Getty Images
Why COVID-19 won’t kill cities
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Two scholars of cities explain why dense, urban areas will survive – and thrive – long after the pandemic ends, and even if they don't get a bailout.
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What is an executive order, and why don’t presidents use them all the time?
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Executive orders aren't as unilateral as they seem. Here's how government keeps them in check.
Incitement to violence is rarely explicit – here are some techniques people use to breed hate
H. Colleen Sinclair, Mississippi State University
Scholars who study dangerous speech have identified common themes that can lead to violence.
How new voters and Black women transformed Georgia’s politics
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Georgia once had 'the South's most racist governor,' a man endorsed by the KKK. Now its senators are a Black pastor and a Jewish son of immigrants. A scholar of minority voters explains what happened.
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The former Federal Reserve chair has the experience and broad respect to get businesses to move on climate change and to lay the foundation for real and lasting progress.
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Beetle parents manipulate information broadcast from bacteria in a rotting corpse
Stephen Trumbo, University of Connecticut
If you think only humans engage in disinformation, think again. Here is a stunning example of a beetle manipulating the odors emitted from a rotting corpse to keep it hidden from competitors.
Economy + Business
Harriet Tubman: Biden revives plan to put a Black woman of faith on the $20 bill
Robert Gudmestad, Colorado State University
Although millions voted to put her face on the bill in an online poll, many still don't know the story of her life and the role faith played in it.
Feeling relatively poor increases support for women in the workplace – but men still don’t want them making household decisions
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Think US evangelicals are dying out? Well, define evangelicalism …
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Women’s health is better when women have more control in their society
Siobhán Mattison, University of New Mexico; Adam Z. Reynolds, University of New Mexico; Katherine Wander, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Living in societies with gender bias can harm women's health.
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The body’s fight against COVID-19 explained using 3D-printed models
Nathan Ahlgren, Clark University
A biologist explains what proteins do in viruses, how they interact with human cells, how the vaccine delivers mRNA into the cell and how antibodies protect us.
Arts + Culture
TikTok’s sea chanteys – how life under the pandemic has mirrored months at sea
Jessica Floyd, Community College of Baltimore County
Crews sang the songs to ease the fears, anxieties and loneliness of daily life on merchant ships.
From our international editions
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As her 16-year reign as German Chancellor comes to an end, Merkel will be remembered for her staunch centrism and her willingness to wait to sense the political mood - sometimes then changing course.
Skip to content
Using Gmail with screen readers
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Did COVID-19 kill the city?
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The Conversation Unsubscribe
10:16 AM (4 minutes ago)
to me
View in browser
US Edition | 26 January 2021
The Conversation
Academic rigor, journalistic flair
I’ve lived in New York City off and on since I moved here for grad school in 2005. From the bars and restaurants to the 24-hour subway and Central Park, the city has always enthralled and inspired me. Even its downsides – the smells, the nonstop traffic and noise, pizza rats – have become reasons for loving the city all the more, like the way a partner’s most annoying habits grow oddly endearing.
That’s why it was startling to see NYC brought to a standstill last spring when the pandemic struck. Even now, my favorite hangouts remain shuttered, and the subway that services the “city that never sleeps” closes at 1 a.m. At least Central Park remains open for weekend runs, albeit masked. Many like me, upon seeing their beloved cities imperiled by a virus that flourishes in density as much as we do, are wondering: Can the city survive COVID-19?
Reassuringly, the answer is “yes.” Or so believe urban experts John Rennie Short of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and Michael Orlando of the University of Colorado, Denver, who have weighed in on what the post-pandemic future holds for cities.
Also today:
Executive orders ain’t nothing new
Women’s health improves in societies where they’re the boss
A salty history of sea chanteys
Bryan Keogh
Senior Editor, Economy + Business
Cities are breeding grounds for creativity – and infectious diseases. Salvator Barki/Moment via Getty Images
Why COVID-19 won’t kill cities
John Rennie Short, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Michael J. Orlando, University of Colorado Denver
Two scholars of cities explain why dense, urban areas will survive – and thrive – long after the pandemic ends, and even if they don't get a bailout.
Politics + Society
What is an executive order, and why don’t presidents use them all the time?
Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University
Executive orders aren't as unilateral as they seem. Here's how government keeps them in check.
Incitement to violence is rarely explicit – here are some techniques people use to breed hate
H. Colleen Sinclair, Mississippi State University
Scholars who study dangerous speech have identified common themes that can lead to violence.
How new voters and Black women transformed Georgia’s politics
Sharon Austin, University of Florida
Georgia once had 'the South's most racist governor,' a man endorsed by the KKK. Now its senators are a Black pastor and a Jewish son of immigrants. A scholar of minority voters explains what happened.
Environment + Energy
Janet Yellen confirmed as first female US Treasury secretary – here’s what she can do about climate change
Rachel Kyte, Tufts University
The former Federal Reserve chair has the experience and broad respect to get businesses to move on climate change and to lay the foundation for real and lasting progress.
Science + Technology
How Biden’s dogs could make the Oval Office a workplace with less stress and better decision-making
Ellen Furlong, Illinois Wesleyan University
Research shows the presence of dogs increases overall human well-being, which can come in handy in high-stress work environments like the White House.
Beetle parents manipulate information broadcast from bacteria in a rotting corpse
Stephen Trumbo, University of Connecticut
If you think only humans engage in disinformation, think again. Here is a stunning example of a beetle manipulating the odors emitted from a rotting corpse to keep it hidden from competitors.
Economy + Business
Harriet Tubman: Biden revives plan to put a Black woman of faith on the $20 bill
Robert Gudmestad, Colorado State University
Although millions voted to put her face on the bill in an online poll, many still don't know the story of her life and the role faith played in it.
Feeling relatively poor increases support for women in the workplace – but men still don’t want them making household decisions
Katrina Kosec, Johns Hopkins University; Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, University of California, Berkeley
A new study explores how feelings of relative poverty can negatively affect gender dynamics among households.
Ethics + Religion
Think US evangelicals are dying out? Well, define evangelicalism …
Ryan Burge, Eastern Illinois University
The number of self-described evangelicals as a share of US population has held steady for the past decade. What is different is that they appear to identify less with church and more with politics.
Health
Women’s health is better when women have more control in their society
Siobhán Mattison, University of New Mexico; Adam Z. Reynolds, University of New Mexico; Katherine Wander, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Living in societies with gender bias can harm women's health.
Video
The body’s fight against COVID-19 explained using 3D-printed models
Nathan Ahlgren, Clark University
A biologist explains what proteins do in viruses, how they interact with human cells, how the vaccine delivers mRNA into the cell and how antibodies protect us.
Arts + Culture
TikTok’s sea chanteys – how life under the pandemic has mirrored months at sea
Jessica Floyd, Community College of Baltimore County
Crews sang the songs to ease the fears, anxieties and loneliness of daily life on merchant ships.
From our international editions
Trump impeachment after leaving office is nothing – in 9th-century Rome they put a pope’s corpse on trial
Frederik Pedersen, University of Aberdeen
The story of the 'Cadaver Synod' tells us that in some cases, even the departed can be held to account.
Auf Wiedersehen, ‘Mutti’: How Angela Merkel’s centrist politics shaped Germany and Europe
Binoy Kampmark, RMIT University
As her 16-year reign as German Chancellor comes to an end, Merkel will be remembered for her staunch centrism and her willingness to wait to sense the political mood - sometimes then changing course.
Why the West is morally bound to offer reparations for slavery
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
The turn towards authoritarianism, xenophobia and racism in Western democracies makes it unlikely that former Western slave-trading nations will agree to reparations in the near future.
Skip to content
Using Gmail with screen readers
Meet
New meeting
Join a meeting
Hangouts
1 of 806,238
Did COVID-19 kill the city?
Inbox
The Conversation Unsubscribe
10:16 AM (4 minutes ago)
to me
US Edition | 26 January 2021
The Conversation
Academic rigor, journalistic flair
I’ve lived in New York City off and on since I moved here for grad school in 2005. From the bars and restaurants to the 24-hour subway and Central Park, the city has always enthralled and inspired me. Even its downsides – the smells, the nonstop traffic and noise, pizza rats – have become reasons for loving the city all the more, like the way a partner’s most annoying habits grow oddly endearing.
That’s why it was startling to see NYC brought to a standstill last spring when the pandemic struck. Even now, my favorite hangouts remain shuttered, and the subway that services the “city that never sleeps” closes at 1 a.m. At least Central Park remains open for weekend runs, albeit masked. Many like me, upon seeing their beloved cities imperiled by a virus that flourishes in density as much as we do, are wondering: Can the city survive COVID-19?
Reassuringly, the answer is “yes.” Or so believe urban experts John Rennie Short of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County, and Michael Orlando of the University of Colorado, Denver, who have weighed in on what the post-pandemic future holds for cities.
Also today:
Executive orders ain’t nothing new
Women’s health improves in societies where they’re the boss
A salty history of sea chanteys
Bryan Keogh
Senior Editor, Economy + Business
Cities are breeding grounds for creativity – and infectious diseases. Salvator Barki/Moment via Getty Images
Why COVID-19 won’t kill cities
John Rennie Short, University of Maryland, Baltimore County; Michael J. Orlando, University of Colorado Denver
Two scholars of cities explain why dense, urban areas will survive – and thrive – long after the pandemic ends, and even if they don't get a bailout.
Politics + Society
What is an executive order, and why don’t presidents use them all the time?
Sharece Thrower, Vanderbilt University
Executive orders aren't as unilateral as they seem. Here's how government keeps them in check.
Incitement to violence is rarely explicit – here are some techniques people use to breed hate
H. Colleen Sinclair, Mississippi State University
Scholars who study dangerous speech have identified common themes that can lead to violence.
How new voters and Black women transformed Georgia’s politics
Sharon Austin, University of Florida
Georgia once had 'the South's most racist governor,' a man endorsed by the KKK. Now its senators are a Black pastor and a Jewish son of immigrants. A scholar of minority voters explains what happened.
Environment + Energy
Janet Yellen confirmed as first female US Treasury secretary – here’s what she can do about climate change
Rachel Kyte, Tufts University
The former Federal Reserve chair has the experience and broad respect to get businesses to move on climate change and to lay the foundation for real and lasting progress.
Science + Technology
How Biden’s dogs could make the Oval Office a workplace with less stress and better decision-making
Ellen Furlong, Illinois Wesleyan University
Research shows the presence of dogs increases overall human well-being, which can come in handy in high-stress work environments like the White House.
Beetle parents manipulate information broadcast from bacteria in a rotting corpse
Stephen Trumbo, University of Connecticut
If you think only humans engage in disinformation, think again. Here is a stunning example of a beetle manipulating the odors emitted from a rotting corpse to keep it hidden from competitors.
Economy + Business
Harriet Tubman: Biden revives plan to put a Black woman of faith on the $20 bill
Robert Gudmestad, Colorado State University
Although millions voted to put her face on the bill in an online poll, many still don't know the story of her life and the role faith played in it.
Feeling relatively poor increases support for women in the workplace – but men still don’t want them making household decisions
Katrina Kosec, Johns Hopkins University; Cecilia Hyunjung Mo, University of California, Berkeley
A new study explores how feelings of relative poverty can negatively affect gender dynamics among households.
Ethics + Religion
Think US evangelicals are dying out? Well, define evangelicalism …
Ryan Burge, Eastern Illinois University
The number of self-described evangelicals as a share of US population has held steady for the past decade. What is different is that they appear to identify less with church and more with politics.
Health
Women’s health is better when women have more control in their society
Siobhán Mattison, University of New Mexico; Adam Z. Reynolds, University of New Mexico; Katherine Wander, Binghamton University, State University of New York
Living in societies with gender bias can harm women's health.
Video
The body’s fight against COVID-19 explained using 3D-printed models
Nathan Ahlgren, Clark University
A biologist explains what proteins do in viruses, how they interact with human cells, how the vaccine delivers mRNA into the cell and how antibodies protect us.
Arts + Culture
TikTok’s sea chanteys – how life under the pandemic has mirrored months at sea
Jessica Floyd, Community College of Baltimore County
Crews sang the songs to ease the fears, anxieties and loneliness of daily life on merchant ships.
From our international editions
Trump impeachment after leaving office is nothing – in 9th-century Rome they put a pope’s corpse on trial
Frederik Pedersen, University of Aberdeen
The story of the 'Cadaver Synod' tells us that in some cases, even the departed can be held to account.
Auf Wiedersehen, ‘Mutti’: How Angela Merkel’s centrist politics shaped Germany and Europe
Binoy Kampmark, RMIT University
As her 16-year reign as German Chancellor comes to an end, Merkel will be remembered for her staunch centrism and her willingness to wait to sense the political mood - sometimes then changing course.
Why the West is morally bound to offer reparations for slavery
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
The turn towards authoritarianism, xenophobia and racism in Western democracies makes it unlikely that former Western slave-trading nations will agree to reparations in the near future.
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You’re receiving this newsletter from The Conversation.
Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
303 Wyman Street, Suite 300
Waltham, MA 02451
Why the West is morally bound to offer reparations for slavery
Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann, Wilfrid Laurier University
The turn towards authoritarianism, xenophobia and racism in Western democracies makes it unlikely that former Western slave-trading nations will agree to reparations in the near future.
You’re receiving this newsletter from The Conversation.
Not interested anymore? Unsubscribe.
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Waltham, MA 02451
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