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Black women have long been targets of police brutality

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+ are people with coronavirus antibodies immune? US Edition - Today's top story: A short history of

+ are people with coronavirus antibodies immune? US Edition - Today's top story: A short history of black women and police violence [View in browser]( US Edition | 12 June 2020 [The Conversation]( Academic rigor, journalistic flair As protesters continue to fill the streets of America’s cities and towns, their focus remains on unchecked police violence. Historian Keisha N. Blain reminds us in her story today that while African American men bear the brunt of that abuse, African American women have a long history of being victims of police violence as well. And “despite, or perhaps because of, their own vulnerability to state-sanctioned violence,” [Blain writes](, “black women have been key voices in the struggle to end it.” - [Police use technology to track protesters]( - [China's bid to win hearts and minds with humanitarian aid]( - [Who killed Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme?]( Naomi Schalit Senior Editor, Politics + Society A protester holds up a sign with Breonna Taylor’s name. Taylor was killed by police officers on March 13. Brett Carlsen/Getty Images [A short history of black women and police violence]( Keisha N. Blain, University of Pittsburgh Young men make up the majority of black people killed by police in the US. That's fed a perception that black women are somehow shielded from the threat of police violence. They aren't. Science + Technology - [High-tech surveillance amplifies police bias and overreach]( Andrew Guthrie Ferguson, American University Police forces across the country now have access to surveillance technologies that were recently available only to national intelligence services. The digitization of bias and abuse of power followed. - [Am I immune to COVID-19 if I have antibodies?]( William Petri, University of Virginia If you have had COVID-19 already, are you protected from another bout of the illness? And is the presence of antibodies in your blood a guarantee of immunity? Politics + Society - [Why soldiers might disobey the president’s orders to occupy US cities]( Marcus Hedahl, United States Naval Academy; Bradley Jay Strawser, Naval Postgraduate School There is a long line of military heroes who had the moral courage not to follow immoral orders. In the days ahead, some may have to consider what exactly their oath to the Constitution requires. - [Students demand removal of ‘mild racist’ from Georgia landscape]( Kathy Roberts Forde, University of Massachusetts Amherst As protests over George Floyd's death consume the country, students are forcing a reappraisal of a controversial editor and orator who helped build modern Atlanta. - [How DC Mayor Bowser used graffiti to protect public space]( Rebekah Modrak, University of Michigan Washington, DC Mayor Muriel Bowser ordered 'BLACK LIVES MATTER' to be painted on a street near the White House. The act would have been considered vandalism had it not been done by city workers. - [Who killed Sweden’s prime minister? 1986 assassination of Olof Palme is finally solved – maybe]( Andrew Nestingen, University of Washington Prosecutors say they've closed Sweden's most famous cold case. But many Swedes still have doubts. The crime and botched investigation have been a 'national trauma' for this normally peaceful place. Economy + Business - [China’s ‘mask diplomacy’ and Silk Road investments may make all the difference if there’s a cold war with the US]( Nader Habibi, Brandeis University; Hans Yue Zhu, Yale University The US may want to rethink its anti-China policy as Beijing's focus on winning hearts and minds seems to be working. - [Could China’s strategic pork reserve be a model for the US?]( David L. Ortega, Michigan State University Shortages and price increases from the coronavirus pandemic are spotlighting solutions to future meat supply chain disruptions. Education - [What colleges and universities can do to improve police-community relations]( Brian N. Williams, University of Virginia Higher education can help empower students to take an active role in public safety. Here are several ways to do it. Ethics + Religion - [Churchgoers aren’t able to lift every voice and sing during the pandemic – here’s why that matters]( Donna M. Cox, University of Dayton A choral conductor and scholar of sacred music explains what's missing from church worship with singing banned due to the pandemic – and why live choir rehearsals are still a ways off Environment + Energy - [More people eat frog legs than you think – and humans are harvesting frogs at unsustainable rates]( H. Resit Akcakaya, Stony Brook University (The State University of New York); C. Can Bilgin, Middle East Technical University; Kerim Çiçek, Ege University Frogs are harvested as food by the millions every year. A new study shows that uncontrolled frog hunting could drive some populations to extinction by midcentury. Arts + Culture - [How ‘Karen’ went from a popular baby name to a stand-in for white entitlement]( Robin Queen, University of Michigan Generic names can take on a linguistic life of their own, becoming powerful forms of social commentary. From our international editions - [Coronavirus weekly: racism, COVID-19, and the inequality that fuels these parallel pandemics]( Liam Petterson, The Conversation Our experts look at why people of colour are being hit harder by COVID-19, New Zealand's success in eliminating the virus, and the latest on drug trials. - [COVID-19 recovery is a chance to improve the African food system]( Kai Mausch, World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF); Michael Hauser, CGIAR System Organization; Todd Rosenstock, World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF); Wanjiku Gichohi-Wainaina, CGIAR System Organization It's time to redesign food systems that deliver healthy foods, allow farming families to make a good living, and support thriving societies. - [Invasive species threaten most protected areas across the world - new study]( Tim Blackburn, UCL Our research investigated 900 'alien' species across almost 200,000 protected areas worldwide. You’re receiving this newsletter from [The Conversation](. Not interested anymore? 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