Can air conditioning really make you sick? A microbiologist explains

Source: The Conversation – UK – By Primrose Freestone, Senior Lecturer in Clinical Microbiology, University of Leicester

Symptoms of ‘sick building syndrome’ can develop in anyone who spends extended periods of time in air-conditioned environments. LightField Studios/ Shutterstock

Air conditioning can feel heaven-sent on hot summer days. It keeps temperatures comfortable and controls humidity, making indoor environments tolerable even on the most brutally warm days.

But some people avoid using air conditioning (AC) no matter how hot it gets outside, out of fear that it will make them sick. While this may sound far-fetched to some, as a microbiologist I can say this fear isn’t altogether unfounded.

If an air conditioning system malfunctions or isn’t properly maintained, it can become contaminated with infectious microbes. This can turn your AC unit into a potential source of numerous airborne infections – ranging from the common cold to pneumonia.

Sick buildings

“Sick building syndrome” is the general name for symptoms that can develop after spending extended periods of time in air-conditioned environments. Symptoms can include headaches, dizziness, congested or runny nose, persistent cough or wheeze, skin irritation or rashes, trouble focusing on work and tiredness.

The condition tends to occur in people who work in office settings, but can happen to anyone who spends extended periods of time in air-conditioned buildings such as hospitals. The symptoms of sick building syndrome tend to get worse the longer you’re in a particular building, and are alleviated after you leave.

A 2023 study from India compared 200 healthy adults who worked at least six-to-eight hours per day in an air-conditioned office with 200 healthy adults who didn’t work in AC. The AC group experienced more symptoms consistent with sick building syndrome over the two-year study period – particularly a higher prevalence of allergies. Importantly, clinical tests showed those who were exposed to AC had poorer lung function and were absent from work more often, compared with the non-AC group.

Other studies have confirmed that AC office workers have a higher prevalence of sick building syndrome than those who do not work in an air-conditioned environment.

It’s suspected that one cause of sick building syndrome is malfunctioning air conditioners. When an AC unit isn’t working properly, it can release allergens, chemicals and airborne microorganisms into the air that it would normally have trapped.

Malfunctioning air conditioners can also release chemical vapours from AC cleaning products or refrigerants into the building’s air. Chemicals such as benzene, formaldehyde and toluene are toxic and can irritate the respiratory system.

Poorly maintained air conditioning systems can also harbour bacterial pathogens which can cause serious infections.

Legionella pneumophila is the bacteria that causes Legionnaires’ disease – a lung infection contracted from inhaling droplets of water containing these bacteria. They tend to grow in water-rich environments such as hot tubs or air conditioning systems.

A man standing on a ladder repairs an air conditioning unit that's mounted to the wall.
AC units need to be properly sanitised and maintained to prevent the spread of infections.
Studio Romantic/ Shutterstock

A Legionella infection is most often caught in communal places such as hotels, hospitals or offices, where the bacteria have contaminated the water supply. Symptoms of Legionnaires’ disease are similar to pneumonia, causing coughing, shortness of breath, chest discomfort, fever and general flu-like symptoms. Symptoms usually begin to show between two and 14 days after being exposed to Legionella.

Legionella infections can be life-threatening and often require hospitalisation. Recovery can take several weeks.

Fungal and viral infections

The accumulation of dust and moisture inside air conditioning systems can also create the right conditions for other infectious microbes to grow.

For instance, research on hospital AC systems has found that fungi such as Aspergillus, Penicillium, Cladosporium and Rhizopusspecies commonly accumulate within the water-rich areas of hospital ventilation systems.

These fungal infections can be serious in vulnerable patients such as those who are immunocompromised, have had an organ transplant or are on dialysis – as well as babies who were born premature. For example, Aspergillus causes pneumonia, abscesses of the lungs, brain, liver, spleen, kidneys and skin, and can also infect burns and wounds.

Symptoms of fungal infections are mostly respiratory and include persistent wheeze or cough, fever, shortness of breath, tiredness and unexplained loss of weight.

Viral infections can also be caught from air conditioning. One case study revealed that children in a Chinese kindergarten class were infected with the norovirus pathogen from their AC system. This caused 20 students to experience the stomach flu.

While norovirus is usually transmitted through close contact with an infected person or after touching a contaminated surface, in this instance it was confirmed, unusually, that the virus was spread through the air – originating from the air conditioning unit in a class restroom. Several other cases of norovirus being spread this way have been reported.

However, air conditioners can also help stop the spread of airborne viruses. Research shows AC units that are regularly maintained and sanitised can reduce circulating levels of common viruses, including COVID.

Another reason AC may increase your risk of catching an infection is due to the way air conditioners control humidity levels. This makes inside air drier than outside air.

Spending extended periods of time in low-humidity environments can dry out the mucus membranes in your nose and throat. This can affect how well they prevent bacteria and fungi from getting in your body – and can leave you more vulnerable to developing a deep-tissue infection of the sinuses.

Air conditioners are designed to filter air contaminants, fungal spores, bacteria and viruses, preventing them from entering the air we breathe indoors. But this protective shield can be compromised if a system’s filter is old or dirty, or if the system isn’t cleaned. Ensuring good AC maintenance is essential in preventing air-conditioner-acquired infections.

The Conversation

Primrose Freestone does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Can air conditioning really make you sick? A microbiologist explains – https://theconversation.com/can-air-conditioning-really-make-you-sick-a-microbiologist-explains-260648

Horror, beauty and reframing colonial histories – what to watch, see and read this week

Source: The Conversation – UK – By Jane Wright, Commissioning Editor, Arts & Culture, The Conversation

I do love a good, proper horror film that puts a bony, creepy hand of unease on your shoulder. With a strange mystery and growing sense of distrust at its heart, Weapons appears to be just that – and going by the trailer, it will scare the bejasus out of us too.

Critics are claiming director Zach Creggers is paying homage to Stephen King with his latest horror. It certainly feels very Stephen King-y. An ordinary teacher (the brilliant Julia Garner) comes to school one day to find her classroom completely empty and her pupils vanished. The distressed parents and assorted angry townsfolk immediately get all suspicious – why just her class? But the truth is altogether more strange and terrifying as we find out what happened to these children.

Psychology researcher Edward White describes the film as a psychological nightmare that serves a twisted exploration of human behaviour. White points to the concept of Social Identity Theory that posits the human brain is wired to divide the world into “us” (good people) and “them” (threats), and things tend to escalate when humans are afraid.

Perhaps real horror lies in the way ordinary people can turn to cruelty when fear is weaponised – while believing they are solidly in the right. But to say more would be to give things away, and we want you to enjoy Weapons without prejudice. The trailer alone will let you know how high you will jump.

Weapons is in cinemas now

Virtual Beauty, the big summer show at Somerset House features a fascinating collection of visual work by artists examining the connection between technology and beauty. The works focus on the way access to digital technology has literally reshaped the human face and form.

Who can forget the first smartphones that allowed us to flip the camera’s focus to ourselves, or the apps that followed, enabling us to reimagine ourselves as fairies, pets or even just drop-dead gorgeous. To me, it feels like a collective experience that has increasingly warped the way we look at each other and configure who we are, caught up in the whims of viral trends. If you’re in London, take this chance to see these thought-provoking show.

Virtual Beauty is on at Somerset House, London, until September 28 2025

Decolonising perspective, telling different stories

Reaching back more than two millennia, the British Museum’s Ancient India Living Traditions exhibition unites the sacred art of Hinduism, Buddhism and Jainism, exploring how the devotional art of these traditions spread to other parts of the Asian subcontinent. Revealing a rippling out along the Silk Road to east Asia and across the Indian ocean to south-east Asia, the exhibition showcases 180 objects (from its own collection and international loans) including sculptures, paintings, drawings and manuscripts – but crucially seeks to highlight their provenance.

Religious philosophy expert Ram Prasad explains that the complex history of India’s ancient multi-spiritual traditions requires skilled narration, and finds the museum is at least starting to acknowledge and respond to the post-colonial cultural reckoning that institutions can no longer ignore.

Ancient India Living Traditions is on at the British Museum, London, until October 19, 2025_

Y Wladfa in Patagonia is home to the famous Welsh community created almost two centuries ago in an effort to preserve Welsh language and culture. But in doing so, a small country that had been itself colonised became a coloniser, and the local Indigenous people that helped the incoming population adjust and adapt have since been marginalised and forgotten.

Now, a new digital exhibition commemorating 160 years since the first settlers arrived restores some balance in perspective. Problematising History: Indigenous perspectives on Welsh settlement in Patagonia presents the experience of the Indigenous Tehuelche people, challenging notions that the largely peaceful co-existence of the two populations was down to the benevolence of the Welsh.

Problematising History can be found on the National Library of Wales website here

By the mid 19th-century, as slavery was being abolished, romanticism had spread across Europe. Affecting every aspect of culture from art and literature and music to philosophy, science and politics, an idealised notion of human freedom lay at its centre. But rarely is this romantic freedom considered in the context of the slavery question.

Now The Trembling Hand, a new book by comparative literature expert Mathelinda Nabugodi is addressing that omission. Nabugodi explores how the proceeds of slavery underpinned literary works, and how received ideas about slavery permeated European culture in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, shaping public understanding.

But chiefly her book seeks to make the presence and contribution of black people visible in this history. Responding to calls to decolonise and diversify the curriculum, a new canon of black romantic writing is beginning to be taught. But, says Nabugodi, it is crucial that we examine the ideas of race and slavery that were baked into the traditional literary canon.

The Trembling Hand is out now

The Conversation

ref. Horror, beauty and reframing colonial histories – what to watch, see and read this week – https://theconversation.com/horror-beauty-and-reframing-colonial-histories-what-to-watch-see-and-read-this-week-262672

Why Jane Austen’s leading men are such enduringly popular heartthrobs

Source: The Conversation – UK – By Louise Curran, Lecturer in Eighteenth-Century and Romantic Literature, University of Birmingham

In Ang Lee’s adaptation of Sense and Sensibility (1995), the handsome cad Willoughby (played by Greg Wise) rescues Marianne (Kate Winslet) on horseback in the middle of a raging storm. Pathetic fallacy has rarely looked so good.

Marianne locks eyes with him and falls passionately in love. In Austen’s version, though, it is Marianne’s mother and sister who first register his attractions. “The eyes of both were fixed on him with an evident wonder and a secret admiration … his person, which was uncommonly handsome, received additional charms from his voice and expression.”

Willoughby has “exterior attractions” that the two women quickly notice. Once Marianne can master her own confusion, she rapidly constructs him in her mind as the ideal romantic protagonist.

“His person and air were equal to what her fancy had ever drawn for the hero of a favourite story … Her imagination was busy, her reflections were pleasant, and the pain of a sprained ankle was disregarded.”

Yet despite such auspicious beginnings, by the end of the novel Willoughby has proved to be feckless, shallow and passively cruel. The actual leading man turns out to be the respectable, yet taciturn, Colonel Brandon (played in the film by Alan Rickman).


This article is part of a series commemorating the 250th anniversary of Jane Austen’s birth. Despite having published only six books, she is one of the best-known authors in history. These articles explore the legacy and life of this incredible writer.


In his introduction to the 1895 edition of Sense and Sensibility, the poet and essayist Henry Austin Dobson remarked upon the shrewd realism at work in Austen’s ending: “Every one does not get a Bingley, or a Darcy (with a park); but a good many sensible girls like Elinor pair off contentedly with poor creatures like Edward Ferrars, while not a few enthusiasts like Marianne decline at last upon middle-aged colonels with flannel waistcoats.”

For many modern readers, Brandon remains a disappointing compromise when compared with Willoughby’s flagrant virility.

Austen’s heartthrobs

All of Austen’s leading men are rich, which certainly helps to intensify their charms. Fitzwilliam Darcy of Pride and Prejudice is the wealthiest man of Austen’s fiction.

Initially he draws local attention for his “fine, tall person, handsome features, noble mien, and the report, which was in general circulation within five minutes after his entrance, of his having ten thousand a year”, until he is quickly “discovered to be proud”.

One of the key debates of Pride and Prejudice (1813) concerns marriage for love versus convenience and financial security. Elizabeth Bennet’s pragmatic best friend Charlotte Lucas argues that the phrase “violently in love” is “so hackneyed, so doubtful, so indefinite” and “often applied to feelings which arise only from a half hour’s acquaintance”.

She eloquently expresses the problematic nature of infatuation and the fictional construction of the heroic ideal so prevalent in Regency culture.

Colin Firth’s infamous Pride and Prejudice wet shirt scene.

The phrase recurs right at the end of the novel, at the moment Elizabeth discloses her feelings for Darcy, producing a happiness in him that he “had probably never felt before; and he expressed himself on the occasion as sensibly and as warmly as a man violently in love can be supposed to do”.

The repeated phrase is a lovely touch, hesitating as it does between endorsing Darcy as a swoon-worthy leading man, burning with passion, and holding back from such excesses through the suggestion of a faint ridiculousness.

The 1995 BBC adaptation of Pride and Prejudice gave visual language to this conjunction of intrepid yet hesitant masculinity. Darcy (played memorably by Colin Firth) emerged from water like an Adonis in a wet shirt, only to face an embarrassed encounter with Elizabeth (Jennifer Ehle). Though usually handsome and always relatively rich, Austen’s leading men are also unconventional in that they can be awkward, mistaken, tongue-tied – even a bit dull.

When Darcy’s housekeeper at Pemberley describes him as “handsome”, this adjective, as Austen expert Janet Todd has noted, “extends over physical, social and moral qualities”. This conjunction of qualities shapes the leading men of Austen’s fiction not so much as suitors as familiar figures who come to be transformed by love.

Uncomfortable matches

Some aspects of this heroism might strike modern readers as odd, and they alert us to changing perceptions of the romantic hero since Austen’s time.

The age difference in Emma between Emma Woodhouse (21) and George Knightley (37) was not uncommon in the Regency era, when marriage was often predicated on women’s reproductive value and men’s financial security.

It can be uncomfortable for some readers when Knightley emphasises the fact that he was 16 years old when Emma was born (as he is cradling his baby niece). And when he jokes about having been in love with her since she was “13 at least”. Rather than suggesting anything dubious, this was intended to draw attention to the incremental steps the couple make from brother and sister-in-law to friends and then lovers.

Johnny Flynn’s Knightley has more youthful energy.

Recent adaptations of Emma seem uncomfortable with this age gap. Despite the fact that both Jeremy Northam and Johnny Flynn were in their mid-30s, and of similar age to Knightley in their respective versions (1996 and 2020), Flynn gives off a younger, more virile energy. He punches the air in joy when he realises Emma will marry him, in contrast to Northam’s emotional restraint.

Maria Edgeworth, a contemporary novelist and important influence on Austen, was struck by the way Austen’s leading men were supportive in private as much as in public.

In a letter, Edgeworth referenced the moment in Persuasion (1817) where Captain Wentworth shows his feelings for Anne by submitting to domestic chores: “The love and lover [are] admirably well drawn: don’t you see Captain Wentworth, or rather don’t you in her place feel him taking the boisterous child off her back as she kneels by the sick boy on the sofa?”

In figures such as Emma’s Mr Knightley, who represents the landed English class, and Persuasion’s Frederick Wentworth, a naval hero of the Napoleonic wars, Austen put emphasis on a new kind of domestic masculinity as a source of female desire and national pride.

Like Austen’s heroines, her leading men are not superlatively good. Their enduring appeal lies more in their capacity for self development and their acceptance of change and adaptation. Austen depicts love as the awakening of mutual esteem. It’s something to be worked on rather than something that magically arrives.


This article features references to books that have been included for editorial reasons, and may contain links to bookshop.org. If you click on one of the links and go on to buy something from bookshop.org The Conversation UK may earn a commission.

The Conversation

Louise Curran does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Why Jane Austen’s leading men are such enduringly popular heartthrobs – https://theconversation.com/why-jane-austens-leading-men-are-such-enduringly-popular-heartthrobs-253578

The UK needs a new electoral system – should it copy Scandinavia?

Source: The Conversation – UK – By Torbjörn Tännsjö, Professor of Practical Philosophy, Stockholm University

Calls for electoral reform are rising in the UK, where a majority of people are now in favour of a different system. It’s easy to see why. A voting system based on having one MP for one constituency, elected via one-person-one-vote, only works well when there are two political parties competing for a position in each constituency rather than multiple parties.

The two-party system invites an unsound party culture in which “entryism” – infiltrating a party to subvert it – is the only method left for people who want to take part in politics but who don’t feel attached to any party. The system also brings little incentive for the two main parties to develop particularly different stances on any issue because they are competing for the same electorate.

Is there an alternative? Of course, there is. Just look at the Scandinavian countries, where a representative method is used for electing parliaments.

The parties present lists of candidates, and they are elected in groups to represent each constituency in proportion to how the electorate votes. For example, in Sweden there are 29 constituencies (valkretsar) and the total number of representatives to the parliament is 349. This means that the main parties gain proportionate representation in all constituencies.

There are also a few extra seats in the parliament given to the parties in order to rectify a remaining slight lack of proportionality. There is a 4% hurdle however, which means a slight distortion – in the interest of efficiency – of the idea of perfect proportionality.

This system means that, figuratively speaking, the people in Scandinavia rule themselves through their parliaments.




Read more:
Survey shows support for electoral reform now at 60% – so could it happen?


There are many positive aspects to such systems and hardly any principled drawbacks. At least this is the judgement I make as a philosopher. I leave the empirical matter to political scientists.

Democratic decision-making

To decide which system is, philosophically speaking, more desirable, we first need to define what it means for a collective of people to reach a decision in a democratic manner.

You could say that a collective decision made by a group has been made in a democratic manner if it has been reached by a mechanism guaranteeing that, if a majority exists in the group, then the collective decision is in accordance with this majority will. The standard mechanism is to rely on majority voting, of course.

We should also add that it is because the final decision is the will of the majority that it has prevailed.

What if no unique majority will exists because of a draw? In that case, it is left for the chairman to decide. Sometimes this happens – and it is a theoretical problem for majoritarian democratic decision-making – but in practice it is always possible to handle it.

Swedish ballot papers featuring lists of candidates for each party.
Swedish ballot papers featuring lists of candidates for each party.
Shutterstock/Martin of Sweden

A democratic decision can only be reached if there are political agents such as voters or members of the parliament prepared (and allowed) to voice their opinions (in an appropriate manner).

The representative ideal

Once democratic decision-making has been defined, it is possible to articulate different ideals in terms of democracy. In each political ideology there is some room for democratic decision-making.

It is therefore possible to specify which decisions should, and which decisions should not, according to a certain political ideology, be taken in a democratic manner – as well as who should make those decisions. In some systems the president is democratically elected by the people directly, in other systems a prime minister is democratically elected by a parliament, and so forth.

The British parliament uses a democratic method of decision-making. The election of a representative in each constituency is also democratic – so long as only two candidates are in serious competition for the position. Either your candidate wins or your candidate loses because the majority want the other person to represent them.

The will of the majority is decisive. But when there are more than two candidates (and of course, in practice there are), a candidate lacking support from a majority can be – and often is – elected.

The representative model is different. The parliament reaches decisions through a democratic decision process but elections to that parliament are not democratic. Instead, they are proportionate, meaning candidates disliked by a majority can be elected. Even small parties get (proportionate) representation.

There is a democratic rationale behind a system of this kind, where representatives of the people gather, put forward proposals, discuss them, and have a vote. This is the idea that the decision the representatives reach will be the one those who are represented would also have reached, had they been able to gather in the same manner.

A proportionate system also guarantees representation for politically disliked minorities. They can enter the parliament even if no constituency exists where they are liked by a majority.

In parliament they can at least argue their case and, if it is a good one, gain support for it in the long run. This system is the best answer to Aristotle’s fear that a majority may come to oppress various minorities. It is not foolproof – but collective decision-making is a risky business in the first place.

Finally, the system meets the Platonist elitist objection that people aren’t good enough to rule themselves. In the proportionate system they rule themselves, but indirectly, and through trusted political experts. There is little reason to believe that the single individual who gets the upper hand in a single-member constituency is good enough to be your ruler.

So, my friendly advice to the people of the UK, at least from a philosophical perspective, is to adopt some version of the Scandinavian model.


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The Conversation

Torbjörn Tännsjö does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. The UK needs a new electoral system – should it copy Scandinavia? – https://theconversation.com/the-uk-needs-a-new-electoral-system-should-it-copy-scandinavia-262670

Authoritarian rulers aren’t new – here’s what Herodotus, an early Greek historian, wrote about them

Source: The Conversation – USA (3) – By Debbie Felton, Professor of Classics, UMass Amherst

Darius I of Persia, center, and his court, from a vase painted between 340 and 320 B.C.E., on display at the National Archaeological Museum in Naples. Carlo Raso/ Flickr, CC BY-SA

No Kings” rallies. “Good Trouble” protests. “Rage against the Regime” uprisings. These events in the first seven months of President Donald Trump’s second term, along with public opinion polls, show that many Americans are concerned about Trump’s expansive use of executive power.

Views on this issue often have a partisan slant. Republicans express more concern about presidential power when Democrats control the White House, and vice versa.

But many in both parties prefer that U.S. political leaders work through established channels, rather than through unconventional actions that may pose challenges to the Constitution and the rule of law, such as mass firings and large-scale deportations.

A marble bust of a bearded man with name Herodotus inscribed in Greek at the base.
Greek historian and ethnographer Herodotus lived from about 484 B.C.E. to about 425 B.C.E.
Metropolitan Museum of Art/Wikimedia

As a professor of classics, I know that concerns about authoritarianism go back thousands of years. One early discussion appears in the work of the fifth-century B.C.E. Greek writer Herodotus, whose “History” – sometimes called “Histories” – is considered the first great prose narrative in Western literature.

In it, Herodotus analyzed the Persian invasion of Greece – the defining event of his time. To understand how Greece, a much smaller power, achieved a major victory over Persia, Herodotus explored the nature of effective leadership, which he saw as a critical factor in the conflict’s outcome.

A shocking upset

Persia was already a vast empire when it invaded Greece, a tiny country made up of independent city-states. The Persians expected a quick and easy victory.

Instead, the Greco-Persian Wars lasted over a decade, from 490 to 479 B.C.E. They ended with Greece defeating the Persians – a shocking upset. Consequently, Persia abandoned its westward expansion, while various Greek city-states formed a tenuous alliance that lasted nearly 50 years.

To explain this unexpected outcome, Herodotus described how Persian and Greek societies developed before this crucial conflict. In his view, the fact that many Greek city-states had representative governments enabled the Greek victory.

These systems allowed individuals to participate in discussing strategies and resulted in the Greeks uniting to fight for freedom. For example, when the Persian fleet was headed toward mainland Greece, the Athenian general Miltiades says, “Never before have we been in such extreme danger. If we give in to the Persians, we will suffer greatly under the tyrant Hippias.”

Herodotus tended to put his political philosophies into the mouths of historical figures such as Miltiades. He condensed his thoughts about government into what historians call the “Constitutional Debate,” a fictional conversation among three real characters: Persian noblemen named Otanes, Megabazus and Darius.

A scrap of dark brown fabric covered with Greek writing
A fragment from Herodotus’ ‘Histories,’ Book VIII, on papyrus, dated to the early second century C.E.
Sackler Library, Oxford/Wikimedia

Persia’s ascent

For centuries prior to invading Greece, Persia had been a small region inhabited by various ancient Iranian peoples and controlled by the neighboring kingdom of Media. Then, in 550 B.C.E., King Cyrus II of Persia overthrew the Medes and expanded Persian territory into what became the Achaemenid Empire.

Thanks to his effective leadership and tolerance for the customs of cultures he conquered, historians call him “Cyrus the Great.”

His son and successor, Cambyses, was less successful. He added Egypt to the Persian empire, but according to Herodotus, Cambyses acted erratically and cruelly. He desecrated the pharaoh’s tomb, mocked the Egyptians’ gods, and killed their sacred Apis bull. He also demanded that Persian judges change the laws so that he could marry his own sisters.

After Cambyses died childless, various factions vied for the Persian throne. Herodotus set his discussion about alternative political systems in this unstable period.

The case for democracy

Otanes, the first speaker in the Constitutional Debate, says “the time has passed for any one man among us to have absolute power.” He recommends that the Persian people themselves handle state affairs.

“How can monarchy continue to be our norm, when a monarch can do whatever he wants, with no accountability whatsoever?” Otanes asks. Even worse, a monarch “disrupts the laws,” as Cambyses did.

Otanes favors rule by the many, which he calls “isonomia,” meaning “equality under the law.” In this system, he explains, politicians are elected and held responsible for their behavior and make decisions transparently.

Today, unlike Otanes, Republican members of Congress appear reluctant to hold Trump responsible for anything or ensure transparency within the administration. Prominent Democrats, including U.S. Rep. Jamie Raskin and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, are challenging Trump administration actions that they view as lawless, such as freezing of funds authorized by Congress.

Do oligarchs know better?

Otanes’ fellow nobleman, Megabazus, agrees that the Persians should abolish monarchy, but he raises concerns about rule by the people.

“The masses are useless – there’s nothing more witless and violent than a crowd,” Megabazus asserts. He believes “commoners” don’t understand the intricacies of policymaking.

Instead, Megabazus suggests oligarchy, or “rule by a few.” Choose the best men in Persia and let them rule everyone else, he urges, because they “will naturally come up with the best ideas.”

But Megabazus doesn’t explain who would qualify as “the best men” or who would select them.

The U.S. has occasionally resembled an oligarchy, with small, elite groups holding most political power. For example, Article 1, Section 3 of the original Constitution provided for election of senators by state legislators, not directly by the people. Senators were not elected by popular vote until the 17th Amendment passed in 1913.

More recently, Trump has received millions of dollars in support from billionaire tech industry leaders such as Elon Musk, Mark Zuckerberg and Jeff Bezos, who hope to influence antitrust policy and deregulation. The Department of Government Efficiency, headed by Musk before he stepped down in May 2025, is now run by young men with virtually no government experience. DOGE’s cuts to programs such as humanitarian aid are wreaking havoc across the globe.

What about monarchy?

The third speaker, Darius, sees democracy and oligarchy as equally flawed. He points out that even well-intentioned oligarchs fight among themselves because “each wants his own opinion to prevail.” This leads to hatred and worse, much like the Trump-Musk relationship gone sour.

Rather, Darius asserts, “using good judgment, a monarch will be a flawless guardian of the people.” He argues that since Persia was freed by one man, King Cyrus II, Persians should maintain their traditional monarchy.

Darius doesn’t explain how to ensure a monarch’s good judgment. But his argument wins out. It had to, since in reality Darius became Persia’s next king. Kings, or shahs, ruled Persia – it became known as Iran in 1935 – until the Iranian Revolution of 1979 eliminated the monarchy and established the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Trump is not technically a monarch, but some believe he acts like one. He and his administration have ignored court orders, preempted the powers of Congress and sought to silence his critics by attacking protected free speech.

A crowd supports a long banner imprinted with the opening lines of the US Constitution.
Protesters carry a banner representing the preamble to the U.S. Constitution in downtown Los Angeles during an anti-Trump demonstration on June 14, 2025.
Mario Tama/Getty Images

Lessons from Herodotus

Herodotus himself was largely pro-democracy, but his Constitutional Debate doesn’t endorse one form of government. Instead, it highlights principles of good leadership. These include accountability, moderation and respect for “nomos,” a Greek term encompassing the concepts of custom and law.

Herodotus emphasizes: “Formerly great cities have become small, while small cities have become great.” Human fortune changes constantly, and Persia’s failure to conquer Greece is just one example.

History has seen the rise and fall of many world powers. Is the United States next? Herodotus viewed the Persian monarchy, whose kings believed their own authority was paramount, as the weakness that led to their astounding defeat in 479 B.C.E.

The Conversation

Debbie Felton is affiliated with the Democratic Party (registered to vote).

ref. Authoritarian rulers aren’t new – here’s what Herodotus, an early Greek historian, wrote about them – https://theconversation.com/authoritarian-rulers-arent-new-heres-what-herodotus-an-early-greek-historian-wrote-about-them-259127

Climat : ce que la décision historique de la Cour internationale de justice change pour l’Afrique

Source: The Conversation – in French – By Zunaida Moosa Wadiwala, PhD candidate in international climate law and litigation and Sessional Lecturer- University of the Witwatersrand, University of the Witwatersrand

_La Cour internationale de justice, la plus haute juridiction au monde, a rendu un avis consultatif le 23 juillet 2025. Elle y affirme que le changement climatique « met en péril toutes les formes de vie ». Cette décision fait suite à une recours porté devant la Cour par Vanuatu, un petit État insulaire du Pacifique Sud menacé par la montée des eaux. Cette initiative a été soutenue par 131 autres pays. Il s’agit du plus grand dossier jamais jugé par la Cour. L’avis définit les mesures que tous les gouvernements doivent prendre pour limiter les émissions de gaz à effet de serre et empêcher le réchauffement climatique. Zunaida Moosa Wadiwala, spécialiste du droit climatique, explique en quoi cet avis consultatif crée un précédent important en matière de responsabilité climatique mondiale.

Quelles sont les conclusions de la Cour internationale de justice ?

L’avis consultatif de la Cour a confirmé que les États ont l’obligation juridique, en vertu du droit international, de protéger le climat contre les changements climatiques causés par l’homme.

Le juge Dire Tladi, également premier juge sud-africain à siéger à la Cour internationale de justice, a qualifié cette affaire de l’une des plus importantes jamais portées devant la Cour. Il a souligné que le changement climatique est une crise existentielle qui menace potentiellement l’avenir de l’humanité.

À l’unanimité, la Cour a rendu un avis selon lequel les États ont l’obligation juridique contraignante de prévenir le réchauffement climatique. Ces obligations sont fondées sur les traités sur le climat, le droit international des droits de l’homme et le droit international coutumier. Elles s’appuient également sur des accords mondiaux visant à protéger des éléments spécifiques de l’environnement (tels que la Convention sur l’ozone, la Convention sur la biodiversité, la Convention sur la désertification et le droit de la mer des Nations unies).

L’avis consultatif précise que les gouvernements doivent prendre les mesures appropriées pour prévenir les dommages environnementaux. Ces mesures doivent se traduire par la mise en des programmes visant à adapter leur pays au changement climatique. Les États doivent également démontrer qu’ils réduisent leurs émissions de gaz à effet de serre.

La Cour a également déclaré que le non-respect de ces obligations constituait un acte illégal au vu du droit international. À ce titre, tout gouvernement responsable devra mettre fin à son comportement nuisible. Il devra également s’assurer de ne jamais répéter cet acte illégal et d’offrir des réparations intégrales pour le préjudice causé à toute personne lésée.

Cet avis consultatif devrait redéfinir le contentieux international en matière de climat et les politiques nationales.

S’agit-il d’une victoire pour les pays africains qui ont fourni des preuves ?

Oui. Le Kenya, le Ghana, le Madagascar, l’Afrique du Sud, le Cameroun, la Sierra Leone, Maurice, le Burkina Faso, et l’Égypte ont présenté des observations sur les dommages causés par le changement climatique. La Cour a accepté leurs arguments selon lesquels les pays en développement ont contribué de manière minime aux émissions mondiales de gaz à effet de serre, mais subissent les effets du changement climatique plus que les pays développés.

L’avis consultatif a également souligné qu’un environnement propre, sain et durable est nécessaire pour que les populations puissent jouir de leurs droits à l’accès à l’eau, à l’alimentation et au logement. Il s’agit là de questions clés qui ont été soulevées par les États africains.

La Cour a également répondu spécifiquement aux revendications des pays africains en affirmant que les pays développés doivent aider les pays en développement à s’adapter au changement climatique. Les pays développés sont tenus de fournir un soutien financier, de partager les nouvelles technologies d’adaptation et d’aider les pays vulnérables à renforcer leurs capacités pour faire face au réchauffement climatique.

La Cour a validé une approche fondée sur les droits, en particulier les droits à la vie, à la santé et à un environnement propre et durable. Elle a déclaré que les obligations en matière de changement climatique doivent s’appliquer erga omnes. Cela signifie qu’elles concernent tous les États, et qu’ils ont la responsabilité collective de les respecter. Cette décision donne raison aux demandes anciennes des pays africains pour plus de justice climatique, une reconnaissance juridique claire, et la reconnaissance de l’inégalité des impacts qu’elles subissent.

Cette décision aidera-t-elle les pays africains à réclamer des réparations pour les dommages climatiques qu’ils ont subis ?

Oui. Les pays africains disposent désormais d’outils pour demander réparation pour les dommages liés au climat. Ils devront établir un lien de causalité entre l’acte illégal d’un ou plusieurs États et les dommages subis. En d’autres termes, ils devront établir un lien de causalité clair, factuel et juridique, entre l’acte illégal et les préjudices.

L’une des difficultés pour faire respecter cette décision est que la Cour internationale de justice ne rend pas de jugements contraignants dans ses avis consultatifs. Ainsi, pour réclamer des réparations, les États africains devraient engager une procédure contentieuse devant la Cour contre les pays fortement émetteurs de gaz à effet de serre. Mais cela n’est possible que si ces pays acceptent la compétence de la Cour.

Étant donné la nature mondiale et cumulative des émissions, prouver qu’un dommage spécifique (inondations, glissements de terrain, sécheresses ou vagues de chaleur) est causé par un pays particulier ou est complexe.

Une autre option pour les pays touchés est de poursuivre en justice des entreprises de combustibles fossiles devant des tribunaux nationaux ou étrangers. L’avis de la Cour renforce les arguments fondés sur le droit des délits (responsabilité pour un acte causant un préjudice) ou sur des notions comme la nuisance (atteinte à l’usage ou à la jouissance d’un bien) et l’enrichissement indu (bénéfice obtenu au détriment d’autrui).

Qu’est-ce que cela signifie pour les pays africains qui continuent d’explorer et d’utiliser les combustibles fossiles ?

L’avis consultatif est très précis sur la manière dont les combustibles fossiles tels que le gaz, le pétrole et le charbon doivent être traités. Il indique que si un État poursuit l’extraction de combustibles fossiles et ne prend pas les mesures climatiques appropriées, il pourrait violer le droit international. Continuer à produire et à consommer des combustibles, octroyer des licences à des sociétés minières pour explorer des combustibles fossiles ou subventionner l’industrie des combustibles fossiles peut également constituer une violation du droit international.

Dans le contexte de la responsabilité des États, cela a de graves implications juridiques pour les 48 pays africains qui sont encore impliqués dans ces activités liées aux combustibles fossiles.

Cet avis consultatif place ces pays devant leurs responsabilités : ils ne peuvent plus demander la justice climatique sur la scène internationale tout en développant les énergies fossiles chez eux. Un État pourrait même être tenu responsable s’il n’impose pas des règles pour encadrer les émissions produites par les entreprises privées sur son territoire.

Il s’agit d’un progrès significatif. Jusqu’ici, par exemple, dans les affaires climatiques sud-africaines qui ont déjà été jugées, elles s’appuyaient principalement sur des questions de procédures, des arguments constitutionnels ou liés aux risques climatiques, comme le manque de consultation des communautés avant l’octroi de licences pour des mines de charbon ou l’impact sur le droit d’accès à l’eau.

Désormais, ce sont les activités liées aux combustibles fossiles elles-mêmes qui peuvent être remises en cause.

En Afrique du Sud, cette nouvelle orientation juridique s’aligne sur la loi sur le changement climatique adoptée en 2024. Cette loi prévoit une réduction progressive, puis une élimination des émissions de gaz à effet de serre d’origine humaine. Elle trace aussi la voie vers une économie sobre en carbone et capable de résister aux effets du changement climatique.

The Conversation

Zunaida Moosa Wadiwala does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Climat : ce que la décision historique de la Cour internationale de justice change pour l’Afrique – https://theconversation.com/climat-ce-que-la-decision-historique-de-la-cour-internationale-de-justice-change-pour-lafrique-262638

Commerce Sénégal-Turquie : comment les Sénégalais ont bâti un pont entre Dakar et Istanbul

Source: The Conversation – in French – By Papa Sow, Senior Researcher, The Nordic Africa Institute

Le Premier ministre sénégalais Ousmane Sonko effectue une visite officielle en Turquie du 6 au 10 août 2025, un déplacement qui s’inscrit dans la continuité des liens anciens et croissants entre Dakar et Ankara. Ce voyage intervient, alors que la Turquie tente de maintenir une position forte en Afrique, avec sa “Politique d’ouverture vers l’Afrique”, adoptée en 1998.

En tant que chercheur sur les questions migratoires et géopolitiques, j’ai analysé, dans une récente étude, les formes d’agences, les réseaux sociaux et le commerce électronique transnational entre Dakar et Istanbul, ainsi que les personnes impliquées, notamment les migrants, les GP (Gratis Passengers ou gratuité partielle). Ces derniers sont des “expéditeurs” de fret ou “facteurs des airs”, qui utilisent leur franchise de bagages, pour transporter des colis hétéroclites entre Istanbul et Dakar. Cette activité est à tort ou à raison taxée de “clandestine”.

Mon étude met en lumière un commerce transnational actif et une migration circulaire et peu visible mais stratégique.

Les entretiens ont principalement porté sur les allers-retours des commerçants entre Dakar et Istanbul, les GP (essentiellement sénégalais) et autres hommes d’affaires sénégalais. Utilisant la puissance des réseaux sociaux tels que WhatsApp, TikTok et Facebook, ils commercent régulièrement avec la Turquie tout en résidant au Sénégal. Certains d’entre eux n’ont d’ailleurs jamais quitté le Sénégal.

Avec les tarifs préférentiels sur les billets d’avion, ils ont réussi à mettre en place un système de transport de colis payant fondé sur leur franchise de bagages. Contrairement aux passagers ordinaires qui ne peuvent dépasser les 46 kg autorisés, les GP peuvent transporter jusqu’à 100 kg par voyage, souvent avec des réductions de 50 % sur leurs tarifs grâce à des cartes de fidélité de compagnies aériennes.




Read more:
Comment l’Afrique de l’Ouest est devenue un terrain d’expansion pour la diplomatie turque


Origines de la coopération entre les deux pays

Les origines de la coopération entre Dakar et Istanbul remontent à 1900, année où un consulat honoraire fut ouvert à Dakar pour préserver les liens établis avec le Sénégal. Le premier ambassadeur de Turquie fut nommé au Sénégal en 1963. La première ambassade du Sénégal ouvrit en Turquie en 2006. Le Sénégal offre un potentiel considérable pour divers produits tels que le coton, les ressources halieutiques, les céréales, les fruits, les peaux, etc., qui sont tous exportés vers la Turquie.

En 2021, le volume des échanges commerciaux, industriels et d’investissements entre les deux pays a ainsi atteint plus de 540 millions de dollars US, contre plus de 91 millions de dollars américains en 2008. Cette coopération s’étend également à la défense, à la sécurité et à la culture. Une centaine d’entreprises turques sont déjà installées au Sénégal.

En 2017, l’État turc a régularisé plus de 1 400 Sénégalais vivant en Turquie. Le nombre de Sénégalais présents sur le sol turc varie selon les sources. On estime que plusieurs milliers de Sénégalais vivent ou transitent par le territoire turc. Depuis le milieu des années 2000, de nombreux commerçants et entrepreneurs sénégalais, notamment des femmes, effectuent des voyages d’affaires à Istanbul ou promeuvent les échanges commerciaux entre les deux pays.

En compétition avec le hub de Dubai, la nouvelle destination que constitue la Turquie a contribué non seulement à modifier un peu le paysage migratoire des Sénégalais vers l’Europe occidentale (qui demeurait la principale destination), mais a également permis à certains commerçants de se spécialiser dans les importations turques. Ces importations sont communément appelées au Sénégal, en langue Wolof, « bagaassu Turki » (produits turcs). Elles sont composées de cosmétiques, d’accessoires pour la maison, de vêtements et de divers produits technologiques.




Read more:
La Turquie, nouvel acteur majeur en Afrique ?


Les réseaux économiques transnationaux entre Istanbul et Dakar

Les commerçants interrogés ont déclaré avoir choisi Istanbul comme centre international d’approvisionnement en gros en raison du coût élevé des voyages vers la Chine et des problèmes de visas avec ce pays. À Istanbul, certains Sénégalais travaillent comme « expéditeurs » de fret, ou GP, en référence aux tarifs préférentiels des compagnies aériennes, et, par extension, comme transporteurs de colis hors taxes vers le Sénégal et d’autres pays africains.

Nous les distinguons des migrants kargo, qui transportent de grosses quantités de marchandises par bateau pour atteindre le Sénégal. Les GP, transportant de plus petites quantités, utilisent l’avion comme moyen de transport. Mais ils peuvent aussi souvent expédier le reste de leurs marchandises via le système Kargo.

Les GP ont également la possibilité de transporter des bagages supplémentaires, facturés comme fret. Dans ce contexte de transactions permanentes, ils effectuent régulièrement deux à trois allers-retours par mois entre Dakar et Istanbul.

Pistes de réflexion autour du phénomène

Premièrement, il serait intéressant de réaliser des études complètes sur le volume de marchandises et de produits expédiés du Sénégal vers la Turquie et inversement, mais aussi de dresser les profils et la cartographie des transporteurs et de connaître leurs revenus annuels. L’étude que j’ai menée n’a pas pu combler ce gap de statistiques. Les États sénégalais et turc seraient ainsi mieux à même de les soutenir en créant de nouveaux emplois.

Cela pourrait mettre en lumière le chiffre d’affaires global des commerçants turcs et sénégalais dans cette mobilité circulaire, mais aussi des nouveaux entrepreneurs émergents sur les réseaux sociaux qui commercent fréquemment sans jamais quitter le Sénégal.

Deuxièmement, le secteur du e-commerce développé par les entrepreneurs des réseaux sociaux est encore peu connu au Sénégal, mais il génère un nouveau marché. Ce créneau peu étudié, qualifié à tort ou à raison d’« informel », mérite une plus grande attention, car il a non seulement contribué à réduire le coût des marchandises sur les marchés locaux pour les consommateurs, mais a également permis de voir au Sénégal la distribution à grande échelle des produits turcs.

Troisièmement, les échanges qui tournent autour du bagaassu Turki sont diversement interprétés. Le mécontentement est visible parmi les artisans sénégalais qui accusent le bagaassu Turki d’avoir contribué à freiner la production textile et les savoir-faire créatifs locaux.

Plusieurs artisans sénégalais – cordonniers, bijoutiers, tailleurs – nous ont confié, par exemple, que les produits turcs – chaussures, sacs en cuir et vêtements surtout – constituent une sérieuse concurrence pour certains produits locaux. Les bagaassu Turki, plus élaborés et plus raffinés, se vendent facilement sur le marché sénégalais grâce à leurs prix abordables, contrairement aux produits locaux fabriqués à la main et nécessitant souvent de nombreuses heures de travail. Une telle doléance mérite également d’être prise au sérieux par les autorités sénégalaises.

Quatrièmement, la migration circulaire de courte durée – aller-retour – est souvent négligée dans les études sur les migrations, mais constitue une solution endogène pertinente entre pays riches et pays à faible revenu.

En favorisant cette forme de migration, au détriment de la migration de longue durée, susceptible de poser davantage de problèmes aux pays hôtes, il est tout à fait possible de redynamiser l’économie des pays à faible revenu grâce à la contribution des migrants. Cela passe par la mise en valeur de leur expertise et compétence, par des actions ciblées et inclusives favorisant l’accès à l’information en temps opportun et à la création d’emplois dans les pays d’origine.

À terme, une telle politique renforcera les capacités institutionnelles et améliorera les politiques migratoires, les cadres juridiques et les réglementations. Cela pourrait ainsi contribuer à faire de la mobilité des personnes et des biens entre les États une solution mutuellement avantageuse et à dissiper progressivement “l’heuristique de la peur” (décrit par le théoricien allemand Hans Jonas qui domine actuellement le débat politique sur les migrations internationales.

The Conversation

Papa Sow does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Commerce Sénégal-Turquie : comment les Sénégalais ont bâti un pont entre Dakar et Istanbul – https://theconversation.com/commerce-senegal-turquie-comment-les-senegalais-ont-bati-un-pont-entre-dakar-et-istanbul-262814

Industrial pollution once ravaged the Adirondacks − decades of history captured in lake mud track their slow recovery

Source: The Conversation – USA (2) – By Sky Hooler, Ph.D. Student in Environmental Science, University at Albany, State University of New York

Scientist Aubrey Hillman, one of the authors of this article, extracts a core of mud from the bottom of Black Pond in June 2025. Patrick Dodson/University at Albany

Lush forests and crisp mountain air have drawn people to New York’s Adirondack Mountains for centuries. In the late 1800s, these forests were a haven for tuberculosis patients seeking the cool, fresh air. Today, the region is still a sanctuary where families vacation and hikers roam pristine trails.

However, hidden health dangers have been accumulating in these mountains since industrialization began.

Tiny metal particulates released into the air from factories, power plants and vehicles across the Midwest and Canada can travel thousands of miles on the wind and fall with rain. Among them are microscopic pollutants such as lead and cadmium, known for their toxic effects on human health and wildlife.

For decades, factories released this pollution without controls. By the 1960s and 1970s, their pollution was causing acid rain that killed trees in forests across the eastern U.S., while airborne metals were accumulating in even the most remote lakes in the Adirondacks.

People sit outside tents surrounded by forest.
In the early 1900s, sanatoriums such as the New York State Hospital at Ray Brook, near Saranac Lake, were built to house tuberculosis patients. The crisp mountain air was believed to help their recovery.
Detroit Publishing Company photograph collection (Library of Congress)

As paleolimnologists, we study the history of the environment using sediment cores from lake bottoms, where layers of mud, leaves and pollen pile up over time, documenting environmental and chemical changes.

In a recent study, we looked at two big questions: Have lakes in the Northeast U.S. recovered from the era of industrial metal pollution, and did the Clean Air Act, written to help stop the pollution, work?

Digging up time capsules

On multiple summer trips between 2021 and 2024, we hiked into the Adirondacks’ backcountry with 60-pound inflatable boats, a GPS and piles of long, heavy metal tubes in tow.

We focused on four ponds – Rat, Challis, Black and Little Hope. In each, we dropped cylindrical tubes that plunge into the darkness of the lake bottom. The tubes suction up the mud in a way that preserves the accumulated layers like a history book.

Back in the lab, we sliced these cores millimeter by millimeter, extracting metals such as lead, zinc and arsenic to analyze the concentrations over time.

The changes in the levels of metals we found in different layers of the cores paint a dramatic picture of the pristine nature of these lakes before European settlers arrived in the area, and what happened as factories began going up across the country.

A century plagued by contamination

Starting in the early 1900s, coal burning in power plants and factories, smelting and the growing use of leaded gasoline began releasing pollutants that blew into the region. We found that manganese, arsenic, iron, zinc, lead, cadmium, nickel, chromium, copper and cobalt began to appear in greater concentrations in the lakes and rose rapidly.

At the same time, acid rain, formed from sulfur and nitrogen oxides from coal and gasoline, acted like chemical shovels, freeing more metals naturally held in the bedrock and forest soils.

Acid rain damaged this forest on Mt. Mitchell in western North Carolina.
Acid rain damaged trees in several states over the decades, leaving ghostly patches in forests.
Will & Deni McIntyre/Corbis Documentary via Getty Images

The result was a cascade of metal pollution that washed down the slopes with the rain, winding through creeks and seeping into lakes.

All of this is captured in the lake sediment cores.

As extensive logging and massive fires stripped away vegetation and topsoil, the exposed landscapes created express lanes for metals to wash downhill. When acidification met these disturbed lands, the result was extraordinary: Metal levels didn’t just increase, they skyrocketed. In some cases, we found that lead levels in the sediment reached 328 parts per million, 109 times higher than natural preindustrial levels. That lead would have first been in the air, where people were exposed, and then in the wildlife and fish that people consume.

These particles are so small that they can enter a person’s lungs and bloodstream, infiltrate food webs and accumulate in ecosystems.

A U.S. map shows wind pattern and the source of pollution to the Adirondacks.
A wind map shows how pollution moves from the Midwest, reaching the Adirondacks. The colors show the average wind speed, in meters per second, and arrows show the wind direction about 3,000 meters above ground from 1948 to 2023. Average calculated using NCEP/NCAR reanalysis data.
Sky Hooler

Then, suddenly, the increase stopped.

A public outcry over acid rain, which was stripping needles from trees and poisoning fish, led to major environmental legislation, including the initiation of the Clean Air Act in 1963. The law and subsequent amendments in the following decades began reducing sulfur dioxide emissions and other toxic pollutants. To comply, industries installed scrubbers to remove pollutants at the smokestack rather than releasing them into the air. Catalytic converters reduced vehicle exhaust, and lead was removed from gasoline.

The air grew cleaner, the rain became less acidic, and our sediment cores show that the lakes began to heal through natural biogeochemical processes, although slowly.

Scientists paddle on Black Pond, surrounded by lush forest, in the Adirondacks.
Patrick Dodson

By 1996, atmospheric lead levels measured at Whiteface Mountain in the Adirondacks had declined by 90%. National levels were down 94%. But in the lakes, lead had decreased only by about half.

Only in the past five years, since about 2020, have we seen metal concentrations within the lakes fall to less than 10% of their levels at the height of pollution in the region.

Our study is the first documented case of a full recovery in Northeast U.S. lakes that reflects the recovery seen in the atmosphere.

It’s a powerful success story and proof that environmental policy works.

Looking forward

But the Adirondacks aren’t entirely in the clear. Legacy pollution lingers in the soils, ready to be remobilized by future disturbances from land development or logging. And there are new concerns. We are now tracking the rise of microplastics and the growing pressures of climate change on lake ecosystems.

Recovery is not a finish line; it’s an ongoing process. The Clean Air Act and water monitoring are still important for keeping the region’s air and water clean.

Though our findings come from just a few lakes, the implications extend across the entire Northeast U.S. Many studies from past decades documented declining metal deposition in lakes, and research has confirmed continued reductions in metal pollutants in both soils and rivers.

In the layers of lake mud, we see not only a record of damage but also a testament to nature’s resilience, a reminder that with good legislation and timely intervention, recovery is possible.

The Conversation

Sky Hooler received funding from National Science Foundation with
the Geological Society of America Graduate Student Geoscience
Research Grant #1949901, 2021.

Aubrey Hillman does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Industrial pollution once ravaged the Adirondacks − decades of history captured in lake mud track their slow recovery – https://theconversation.com/industrial-pollution-once-ravaged-the-adirondacks-decades-of-history-captured-in-lake-mud-track-their-slow-recovery-260182

Bureau of Labor Statistics tells the US what’s up with the economy – Trump firing its top official may undercut trust in its data

Source: The Conversation – USA (2) – By Thomas A. Stapleford, Associate Professor of History and Liberal Studies, University of Notre Dame

Isador Lubin, chief of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, presents data to a Senate committee in 1937. Library of Congress

Many financial and political analysts are trying to assess the impact of President Donald Trump’s decision to fire U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics Commissioner Erika McEntarfer on Aug. 1, 2025, the same day that an unemployment report conveyed weakness in the job market. Some of the strongest criticism of this unprecedented move has come from Republican-aligned and nonpartisan experts, including a former BLS commissioner Trump appointed during his first term and the American Economic Association, a nonprofit that has 17,000 members in academic, government and business professions. They have said that what Trump has accused McEntarfer of doing – “rigging” data“ – would be impossible to pull off.

The Conversation U.S. asked Tom Stapleford, a professor who has written a book on the political history of the U.S. consumer price index, to explain why this move could undermine trust in the indicators the government releases and why that could damage the economy.

What key data does the BLS release?

Founded in 1884, the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes monthly and annual data about American consumers and workers. Historically, the BLS has focused on urban workers and consumers, while the Department of Agriculture covered farmers and agricultural work. But these days, the Bureau of Labor Statistics also collects some data reflecting rural areas too.

The bureau publishes monthly data on inflation, employment and unemployment, and compensation. It also measures productivity on a quarterly basis, and twice per year it issues reports on consumer purchases – what people buy and how much they spend in different categories.

These official statistics are often revised in the months that follow as the bureau adopts new methods or more data becomes available.

A group of men line up at a booth beside a banner that says 'now hiring.'
A recruiter speaks with potential hires at a job fair in Florida in April 2025. Later, that change in employment status could register in the data that the Bureau of Labor Statistics tracks throughout the United States.
Joe Raedle/Getty Images

How can data affect markets and the economy?

The bureau’s data on inflation, employment, unemployment and compensation draws the most attention because it answers basic questions about the economy.

For example: Are prices rising? Are employers adding new jobs? Are people finding work? How much are workers getting paid?

Employment and unemployment may seem very similar, but they show you different things. BLS employment data tells you how many jobs there are, where they are and in what lines of work.

BLS unemployment data is about people. How many Americans are looking for work but can’t find a job? How many have part-time jobs but would prefer to work full time?

The BLS also collects, analyzes and releases inflation data that shows how price changes are affecting American consumers. The BLS consumer price index data is weighted so that changes in the prices of items that are a big part of household expenses will have a larger effect on the final results than other changes.

Each BLS statistic has a narrow focus, but, taken together, they can reveal a lot about economic conditions across the country and in specific states.

Businesses and investors look to BLS data as guides for trends that might affect companies or financial markets as a whole. If prices start to rise quickly, the Federal Reserve might raise interest rates, which reduces bond prices.

If job creation starts to slow, the country might be heading toward a recession, and employers might pull back on hiring and production or invest less in new equipment. Policymakers use BLS statistics to guide decisions about government actions, and everyone else may use them to judge whether politicians have succeeded in managing the economy well.

Of course, all of these uses depend on Americans being able to trust the numbers. The BLS goes to great lengths to secure that trust, publishing detailed descriptions of its methods and research papers that try to explain patterns in the data and test new approaches. Until recently, the BLS also had two unpaid advisory committees of economists and statisticians from companies, universities and nonprofits that analyzed BLS methods and offered advice.

However, the Department of Labor disbanded those committees in March 2025, stating that the committees “had fulfilled their intended purpose.”

A man draws a consumer price index chart.
Even in the early 1970s, the BLS employed artists whose job it was to make charts to clearly convey the data it collected.
Library of Congress

What does the BLS commissioner do?

The BLS commissioner oversees all aspects of the bureau’s operations and serves as the primary liaison with Congress and the leadership of the Department of Labor.

Although some early BLS commissioners did not have advanced degrees, all commissioners since the 1930s have had Ph.D.s in economics or statistics, as well as substantial experience using or producing statistical data.

Unlike rank-and-file BLS staff, who are typically career civil servants, the commissioner is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate for a four-year term. Due to the timing of those terms, each commissioner’s tenure normally spans two presidential terms. The Senate overwhelmingly approved McEntarfer’s nomination, for example, in an 86-8 vote held in January 2024.

However, this appointment is at will, meaning that a president can legally remove a commissioner at any time.

Could the top BLS official fudge any data?

It would be very difficult for the commissioner to alter or falsify data on his or her own.

The data is produced collectively by a large nonpartisan staff who are protected by civil service regulations, so it would be impossible for the commissioner simply to change the numbers.

Nonetheless, the commissioner could shape BLS data indirectly. The commissioner could make certain data harder to access, devote fewer resources to some topics or close some data series altogether.

More significantly, creating national statistics is complicated: There is always uncertainty, and even experts will disagree on many issues. A sufficiently motivated commissioner could potentially nudge the data in favored directions simply by altering the methodology.

If BLS staff thought a commissioner was truly trying to manipulate the statistics, however, I would expect many of them would resign or protest publicly. And there’s no sign of that having happened under McEntarfer’s leadership. She has strong support from former BLS commissioners and leading economists.

What are some possible consequences?

I do not expect to see any immediate consequences from McEntarfer’s firing.

The acting commissioner of the BLS, William Wiatrowski, is a longtime BLS employee who has held this role before.

The rest of the bureau’s staff remain the same. Over the long term, the actions of whomever Trump appoints as McEntarfer’s permanent replacement will determine whether her firing was an aberration or the mark of a new relationship between the White House and the BLS that could eventually undercut trust in its statistics.

To strengthen confidence in the BLS, the new commissioner could reinstate the external advisory committees that the Trump administration has disbanded. But he or she could weaken confidence by making controversial changes, especially regarding employment statistics, that are criticized by leading professional organizations or that cause top BLS officials to quit their jobs.

I believe it’s unlikely that BLS statistics could be faked in ways that would deceive economists. But they could become much less useful, and that would be bad for the United States.

The Conversation

Thomas A. Stapleford does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. Bureau of Labor Statistics tells the US what’s up with the economy – Trump firing its top official may undercut trust in its data – https://theconversation.com/bureau-of-labor-statistics-tells-the-us-whats-up-with-the-economy-trump-firing-its-top-official-may-undercut-trust-in-its-data-262673

AI is taking hold in K-12 schools – here are some ways it can improve teaching

Source: The Conversation – USA (2) – By Michael G. Kozak, Associate Clinical Professor of Educational Administration and Leadership, Drexel University

Artificial intelligence can bring a host of benefits, such as individualized learning, but can also encourage kids to shortcut learning. Jonathan Kirn via Getty Images

Generative AI platforms have sent shock waves through the K-12 education sector since the public release of ChatGPT nearly three years ago.

The technology is taking hold under the belief that students and teachers need to be proficient in these powerful tools, even though many concerns remain around equity, privacy, bias and degradation of critical thinking among students.

As a professor who teaches future educators and is part of an AI-focused working group, I have observed the potential for artificial intelligence to transform teaching and learning practices in K-12 schools. The trends I am seeing – and that I encourage – are for K-12 educators to use AI to shift from memorization and rote learning to instead emphasize critical thinking and creativity.

Jumping in the deep end

After the public release of ChatGPT in late 2022, some large school districts initially banned the use of AI due to concerns about cheating. Surveys also reflected worries about chatbots fabricating information, such as references for school papers, in addition to concerns about misinformation and biases existing in AI responses to prompts.

Students, on the other hand, tended to jump into the deep end of the AI pool. Common Sense Media, which offers recommendations on children’s media consumption, published a report in 2024 showing that students were using AI-supported search and chatbots for homework and to stave off boredom as well as other personal reasons, including “creating content as a joke, planning activities, and seeking health advice.” Most of the teachers and parents of the students in the study were unaware that students were using the technology.

In my work at Drexel University teaching graduate students who are aspiring school principals or superintendents, I found that in 2023, K-12 students were afraid of using AI due to the policies implemented in their districts banning it. However, it quickly became apparent that students were able to mask their use of AI by instructing AI to insert some mistakes to their assignments.

Meanwhile, despite teachers’ initial concerns about AI, approximately 60% of K-12 teachers now admit to using AI to plan lessons, communicate with parents and assist with grading. Concerns over students cheating still exist, but time-strapped teachers are finding that using AI can save them time while improving their teaching.

A recent Walton Foundation and Gallup study revealed that teachers who used AI tools weekly saved an average of 5.9 hours per week, which they reallocated to “providing students more nuanced feedback, creating individualized lessons, writing emails and getting home to their families in a more reasonable time.”

Opening up new ways of teaching

I recommend that my graduate students use AI because I think ignoring emerging trends in education is not wise. I believe the benefits outweigh the negatives if students are taught ethical use of the technology and guardrails are put in place, such as requiring that AI be cited as a source if students use it in coursework.

Advocates say AI is changing teaching for the better, since it forces teachers to identify additional ways for students to demonstrate their understanding of content. Some strategies for students who rely too heavily on AI include oral presentations, project-based learning and building portfolios of a student’s best work.

One practice could involve students showing evidence of something they created, implemented or developed to address a challenge. Evidence could include constructing a small bridge to demonstrate how forces act on structures, pictures or a video of students using a water sampling device to check for pollution, or students designing and planting a community garden. AI might produce the steps needed to construct the project, but students would actually have to do the work.

Teachers can also use AI to create lessons tailored to students’ interests, quickly translate text to multiple languages, and recognize speech for students with hearing difficulties. AI can be used as a tutor to individualize instruction, provide immediate feedback and identify gaps in students’ learning.

When I was a school superintendent, I always asked applicants for teaching positions how they connected their classroom lessons to the real world. Most of them struggled to come up with concrete examples. On the other hand, I have found AI is helpful in this regard, providing answers to students’ perennial question of why they need to learn what is being taught.

Thought partner

Teachers in K-12 schools are using AI to help students develop their empathetic skills. One example is prompting an AI to “redesign the first-day experience for a relocated student entering a new middle school.” AI created the action steps and the essential questions necessary for refining students’ initial solutions.

In my own classroom, I’ve used AI to boost my graduate students’ critical thinking skills. I had my students imagine that they were college presidents facing the loss of essential federal funding unless they implemented policies limiting public criticism of federal agencies on campus. This proposed restriction, framed as a requirement to maintain “institutional neutrality,” requires students to develop a plan of action based on their knowledge of systems and design thinking. After each team developed their solution, I used AI to create questions and counterpoints to their proposed solution. In this way, AI becomes a critical thought partner to probe intended and unintended outcomes, gaps in students’ thinking and potential solutions that might have been overlooked.

AI researcher Ethan Mollick encourages educators to use AI as a springboard, similar to jazz musicians improvising, as a way to unleash new possibilities. Mollick advises people to partner with AI as co-intelligence, be the human in the loop, treat AI as a co-worker, albeit one that needs to be prodded for evidence, and to learn to use it well. I concur.

Changing perspectives on AI

Some early studies on the effects of using AI in education have raised concerns that the convenience of generative AI will degrade students’ learning and erode their critical thinking skills.

I think that further studies are needed, but I have found in my own work and in the work of my graduate students that AI can enhance human-produced work. For example, AI-powered teaching assistants, like Khanmigo or Beghetto Bots, use AI to help students solve problems and come up with innovative solutions without giving away the answers.

My experiences with other educators on the front lines show me that they are beginning to change their perspectives toward students using AI, particularly as teachers realize the benefit of AI in their own work. For example, one of my graduate students said his district is employing a committee of educators, students and outside experts to explore how AI can be used ethically and in a way that won’t erode students’ critical thinking skills.

Educators are starting to realize that AI isn’t going away anytime soon – and that it’s better to teach their students how to use it, rather than leave them to their own devices.

The Conversation

Michael G. Kozak does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

ref. AI is taking hold in K-12 schools – here are some ways it can improve teaching – https://theconversation.com/ai-is-taking-hold-in-k-12-schools-here-are-some-ways-it-can-improve-teaching-259501