Hawaii's Erupting Volcano, Motherhood and Politics, Carbon NeutralityTop of Mind with Julie Rose • Season 1, Episode 818
May 23, 2018 • 1h 42m
Hawaii’s Erupting Volcano
Guest: Estelle Chaussard, PhD, Professor of Geology and Geophysics, State University of New York at Buffalo
Hawaii’s Kilauea Volcano continues to erupt. Its eruptions and lava flows have destroyed dozens of homes, released lethal gases and set forests ablaze. As the lava reaches the Pacific Ocean it’s releasing caustic plumes of acid haze. And now, officials say lava is encroaching on a geothermal plant that’s a major source of power on the island, as well as a potential source for toxic gas leaks if breached.
Homeless Youth Are Especially Vulnerable to Human Trafficking
Guest: Debra Schilling Wolfe, MEd, Founding Executive Director of the Field Center for Children's Policy, Practice and Research, University of Pennsylvania
More than a million teenagers under the age of 18 are homeless in the United States and “unaccompanied”– meaning they’ve got no parent or caregiver. They’re fending for themselves in homeless shelters and on the streets – and worrisome new research shows they’re extremely susceptible to human trafficking.
Motherhood and Politics
Guest: Laurel Elder, PhD, Professor of Political Science and Coordinator of the Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Hartwick College
In Maryland, Krish Vignarajah is running in the Democratic primary race for governor, and she campaigns on the fact that she’s a woman and mother of a baby. In her campaign ad, she is seen breastfeeding her baby. Here we discuss the way women on the 2018 ballot are tackling perceptions of motherhood and politics.
The Future of A-I
Guest: Miles Brundage, Research Fellow at the University of Oxford's Future of Humanity Institute, and PhD candidate in Human and Social Dimensions of Science and Technology, Arizona State University
Artificial intelligence makes it possible for Google and Netflix and other services to learn our preferences, anticipate our needs and make recommendations we often end up loving. Which is great. But what might spammers and hackers do with the same capability? Rather than lea