NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Some refugees stay in temporary status indefinitely – how they still manage to create homes and communities

  • Written by Anita H. Fábos, Professor of International Development, Community, and Environment, Clark University
imageA cafe in Cairo, Egypt, that is predominantly visited by Sudanese migrants, in August 2017.Oliver Weiken/picture alliance via Getty Images

More than 6.5 million Ukrainian war refugees are now scattered across Europe and North America, most with temporary emergency residency allowing them to stay in host countries for one to three years.

But roughly...

Read more: Some refugees stay in temporary status indefinitely – how they still manage to create homes and...

Salman Rushdie wasn't the first novelist to suffer an assassination attempt by someone who hadn't read their book

  • Written by Jonathan Bate, Foundation Professor of Environmental Humanities, Arizona State University
imageA still from the film version of Hugo Bettauer's prophetic 1922 novel 'The City Without Jews.'Barbican

Hadi Matar, the man charged with the attempted murder of the distinguished novelist Salman Rushdie, admitted that he had only “read like two pages” of “The Satanic Verses,” Rushdie’s 1988 novel that angered...

Read more: Salman Rushdie wasn't the first novelist to suffer an assassination attempt by someone who hadn't...

Child poverty estimates point to a record low in 2021 – here's how it could have been even lower

  • Written by Steven Pressman, Part-Time Professor of Economics, The New School
imageGovernment benefits can reduce child poverty.DBenitostock/Moment via Getty Images, CC BY-NC-ND

The U.S. government will likely report in September 2022 that for 2021 its most accurate measure of child poverty was the lowest on record. This was due, in large part, to generous government benefits. Our research suggests child poverty in 2021 would...

Read more: Child poverty estimates point to a record low in 2021 – here's how it could have been even lower

Rapid eye movements in sleeping mice match where they are looking in their dreams, new research finds

  • Written by Yuta Senzai, Postdoctoral Scholar in Physiology, University of California, San Francisco
imageDo your eyes play a role in where you look in your dreams?PM Images/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Does rapid eye movement during sleep reveal where you’re looking at in the scenery of dreams, or are they simply the result of random jerks of our eye muscles? Since the discovery of REM sleep in the early 1950s, the significance of these rapid...

Read more: Rapid eye movements in sleeping mice match where they are looking in their dreams, new research...

America's summer of floods: What cities can learn from today's climate crises to prepare for tomorrow's

  • Written by Richard B. (Ricky) Rood, Professor of Climate and Space Sciences and Engineering and School of Environment and Sustainability, University of Michigan
imageFlash flooding made a mess in Dallas in August 2022.AP Photo/LM Otero

Powerful storms across the South, following flash floods in Dallas, Death Valley, St. Louis, Yellowstone and Appalachia, have left cities across the U.S. questioning their own security in a warming climate.

Dallas was hit with nearly 15 inches of rain that turned roads into rivers...

Read more: America's summer of floods: What cities can learn from today's climate crises to prepare for...

Chautauqua, where Salman Rushdie was attacked, has a long history of promoting free speech and learning for the public good

  • Written by Charlotte M. Canning, Frank C. Erwin, Jr. Centennial Professor in Drama, University of Texas at Austin
imageChautauqua's lectures and performances drew hundreds of people with their promise of self-transformation.L.E. Walker/New York Public Library

On Aug. 20, 2022, a large crowd gathered in front of the New York Public Library to hear prominent authors such as Kiran Desai, Gay Talese and Colum McCann read from novelist Salman Rushdie’s works. The...

Read more: Chautauqua, where Salman Rushdie was attacked, has a long history of promoting free speech and...

New restrictions on abortion care will have psychological harms -- here's what research shows will happen in post-Roe America

  • Written by Rachel Diamond, Clinical Training DIrector and Assistant Professor of Couple and Family Therapy, Adler University
imageWithout full access to reproductive health care, traumatic birth experiences will undoubtedly rise.urbazon/E+ via Getty Images

“I’m struggling a bit this morning,” a client of mine stated at the start of our session the morning of June 24, 2022. “I just heard on the news about the decision to overturnRoe v. Wade. There was...

Read more: New restrictions on abortion care will have psychological harms -- here's what research shows will...

Conviction of two Michigan kidnap plotters highlights danger of violent conspiracies to US democracy

  • Written by Amy Cooter, Senior Research Fellow in Terrorism, Extremism and Counterterrorism, Middlebury
imageBarry Croft Jr., left, and Adam Fox were found guilty by a federal jury on charges related to a 2020 plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Witmer.Kent County Sheriff's Office via AP

Two of the six men facing federal charges in a plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer in 2020 were found guilty by a federal jury on Aug. 23, 2022.

The verdict...

Read more: Conviction of two Michigan kidnap plotters highlights danger of violent conspiracies to US democracy

Human nature can steer people away from new things – and that can blind them to novel threats

  • Written by Sam Hunter, Professor of Organizational Psychology, University of Nebraska Omaha
imageWhen you don't know what you're looking for, it's easier to miss it.U.S. Navy via Getty Images News

There’s a military aphorism that generals are always fighting the last war. It’s a natural human tendency to focus on the kinds of threats you’re used to while playing down the likelihood or importance of some new sort of attack.

Of...

Read more: Human nature can steer people away from new things – and that can blind them to novel threats

More Articles ...

  1. Misinformation is a common thread between the COVID-19 and HIV/AIDS pandemics – with deadly consequences
  2. Diet can influence mood, behavior and more – a neuroscientist explains
  3. Conservatives and liberals are equally likely to fund local causes, but liberals are more apt to also donate to national and global groups – new research
  4. Ukraine celebrates Independence Day, with a new level of meaning as it fights back against Russia
  5. A new US data privacy bill aims to give you more control over information collected about you – and make businesses change how they handle data
  6. Dolphins use signature whistles to represent other dolphins – similarly to how humans use names
  7. Brad Pitt's apparently defunct foundation reached a $20.5 million settlement with Hurricane Katrina survivors over its green housing debacle
  8. Over-the-counter hearing aids have been greenlighted by the FDA – your local pharmacist will soon be able to sell you the device you need
  9. A tale of two climate policies: India's UN commitments aim low, but its national policies are ambitious – here's why that matters
  10. Yoga versus democracy? What survey data says about spiritual Americans' political behavior
  11. Six benefits that the metaverse offers to colleges and universities
  12. Lunar mining and Moon land claims fall into a gray area of international law, but negotiations are underway to avoid conflict and damage to spacecraft
  13. Ukraine's war has shattered some friendships and family ties – but 'care ethics' have strengthened other relationships
  14. 5 unsung films that dramatize America's rich labor history
  15. Slavery and war are tightly connected – but we had no idea just how much until we crunched the data
  16. Cell towers have come to symbolize our deep collective anxieties
  17. Two surprising reasons behind the obesity epidemic: Too much salt, not enough water
  18. What are wormholes? An astrophysicist explains these shortcuts through space-time
  19. Does turning the air conditioning off when you're not home actually save energy? Three engineers run the numbers
  20. Advanced Placement courses could clash with laws that target critical race theory
  21. Dog owners take more risks, cat owners are more cautious – new research examines how people conform to their pets' stereotypical traits
  22. Dr. Oz should be worried – voters punish 'carpetbaggers,' and new research shows why
  23. College students are increasingly identifying beyond 'she' and 'he'
  24. We praise people as ‘Good Samaritans,’ but there’s a complex history behind the phrase
  25. What is listeria? A microbiologist explains the bacterium behind recent deadly food poisoning outbreaks
  26. Sandcastle engineering – a geotechnical engineer explains how water, air and sand create solid structures
  27. With 'bravery' as its new brand, Ukraine is turning advertising into a weapon of war
  28. Big new incentives for clean energy aren't enough – the Inflation Reduction Act was just the first step, now the hard work begins
  29. How to destroy a 'forever chemical' – scientists are discovering ways to eliminate PFAS, but this growing global health problem isn't going away soon
  30. Will the Inflation Reduction Act actually reduce inflation? How will the corporate minimum tax work? An economist has answers
  31. Poland's warm welcome to about 2 million Ukrainian refugees draws global praise, but it might not be sustainable
  32. Conditions in prisons during heat waves pose deadly threats to incarcerated people and prison staff
  33. How gay rodeos upend assumptions about life in rural America
  34. Fake research can be harmful to your health – a new study offers a tool for rooting it out
  35. A dog has caught monkeypox from one of its owners, highlighting risk of the virus infecting pets and wild animals
  36. Ukrainian people are resisting the centuries-old force of Russian imperialism – Ukraine war at 6 months
  37. PACT Act providing health care to burn pit victims caps decades of denied benefits for veterans
  38. What is a fatwa? A religious studies professor explains
  39. Prosecuting a president is divisive and sometimes destabilizing – here's why many countries do it anyway
  40. How Stoicism influenced music from the French Renaissance to Pink Floyd
  41. 1 in 10 teachers say they've been attacked by students
  42. GOP 'message laundering' turns violent, extremist reactions to search of Trump's Mar-a-Lago into acceptable political talking points
  43. You don't have to be a spy to violate the Espionage Act – and other crucial facts about the law Trump may have broken
  44. Liz Cheney trounced: 'Black sheep effect' and GOP partisan identity explain her decisive defeat after criticizing Trump
  45. A year after the fall of Kabul, Taliban's false commitments on terrorism have been fully exposed
  46. Computer science benefits students with learning disabilities – but not always for the long term
  47. Religions have long known that getting away from it all is good for the mind, body and spirit
  48. Which microbes live in your gut? A microbiologist tries at-home test kits to see what they reveal about the microbiome
  49. Unsealed court documents show the FBI was looking for evidence Trump violated the Espionage Act and other laws – here’s how the documents seized show possible wrongdoing
  50. Here's how government documents are classified to keep sensitive information safe