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The Conversation Daily

The Conversation Daily — July 12, 2026

10 stories · July 12, 2026

Plus This issue is new — delivery and download are for Plus until it ages into the free archive.

In this issue

  1. 1

    For Haitian women in Florida, the loss of TPS is more than an immigration law issue

    theconversation.com · Ammcise Apply, Ph.D. Candidate in Community and Public Affairs, Binghamton University, State University of New York

    The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on June 25, 2026, that the Trump administration may revoke the temporary protected status of 350,000 Haitians. This is not the first time a legal challenge to TPS has held…

  2. 2

    Venezuela’s deadly earthquakes happened on a fault similar to the San Andreas, and the risks aren’t over yet – a geophysicist explains

    theconversation.com · Sylvain Barbot, Professor of Earth Sciences, USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences

    A June 24, 2026, earthquake shook buildings to the ground, trapping and killing people in Caracas, Venezuela, and nearby communities. Manaure Quintero/AFP via Getty Images Venezuela and its capital,…

  3. 3

    College is unaffordable for many Americans – but don’t just blame rising tuition

    theconversation.com · Thomas Adam, Professor of Political Science, University of Arkansas

    Private U.S. colleges and universities are charging an average of $44,961 in tuition for the 2025-26 school year. Catherine Lane/Moment via Getty Images As more Americans consider whether a college…

  4. 4

    Summer camps remain a battleground over what it means to be American

    theconversation.com · Seth T. Kannarr, Ph.D. Graduate in Geography, University of Tennessee · Derek H. Alderman, Chancellor's Professor of Geography, University of Tennessee

    A camper blows a bugle at Camp Nathan Hale in upstate New York in 1943. Gordon Parks/Heritage Images/via Getty Images Imagine tall trees across the lake, a calm breeze, children laughing in the…

  5. 5

    Techno tourism in Detroit – what do visitors owe the city that created the music?

    theconversation.com · Carla Vecchiola, Lecturer in History, University of Michigan-Dearborn

    In 1997, I was one of relatively few tourists in Detroit. Well before #vanlife was a hashtag, I left my home state of California and drove around the country for five months living in a 1982…

  6. 6

    When your local reflecting pool or pond turns green with algae, don’t reach for chemicals – nature has better solutions

    theconversation.com · Eric Palkovacs, Professor of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of California, Santa Cruz

    A National Park Service employee uses a vacuum to clean the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool on June 20, 2026. AP Photo/Mark Schiefelbein When the Lincoln Memorial Reflecting Pool turned green with…

  7. 7

    Why rural healthcare fund’s $50B focus on tech upgrades may not help vulnerable hospitals and providers

    theconversation.com · Kevin J. Bennett, Professor of Family and Preventive Medicine, University of South Carolina

    Southwest Georgia Regional Medical Center in Cuthbert is one of close to 200 rural hospitals that have closed in the past two decades. AP Photo/Jeff Amy Healthcare across rural America is in crisis.…

  8. 8

    What are supermassive black holes? Everything you need to know – and what astronomers are still learning – about these mysterious objects

    theconversation.com · Mary Ogborn, Astrophysics PhD Candidate, Penn State

    An artist's impression of the black hole in the M87 galaxy and its powerful jet. S. Dagnello (NRAO/AUI/NSF), CC BY-NC-SA Nearly every massive galaxy observed hosts a supermassive black hole at its…

  9. 9

    What 20 million bans reveal about the strain on Wikipedia’s volunteers

    theconversation.com · Ryan McGrady, Senior Research Fellow, Initiative for Digital Public Infrastructure, UMass Amherst

    The numbers for Wikipedia tell a story of change – and stress. Mateusz Slodkowski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images This year, Wikipedia is celebrating 25 years as the internet’s encyclopedia…

  10. 10

    Students branch out and climb trees to learn up close how to care for them and why they help cities flourish

    theconversation.com · Sharon Jean-Philippe, Professor of Urban Forestry, University of Tennessee

    Undergraduate students at the University of Tennessee take their study of trees to new heights. Sharon Jean-Philippe Students who study forestry will read about trees, but they do not often get the…