NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Extra food assistance cushioned the early pandemic's blow on kids' mental health

  • Written by Grace Melo, ACES Faculty Fellow, Texas A&M University
imageThe pandemic-era expansion of SNAP benefits ended in all U.S. states by March 2023.aogreatkim/iStock/Getty Images Plus via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Despite the heightened poverty and unemployment seen when the COVID-19 pandemic got underway, many low-income U.S. children did not...

Read more: Extra food assistance cushioned the early pandemic's blow on kids' mental health

Israel's military reservists are joining protests – potentially transforming a political crisis into a security crisis

  • Written by Dan Arbell, Scholar-in-residence at the Center for Israeli Studies, American University
imageA member of Israel's military reserves takes part in a protest on March 16, 2023 in Bnei Brak, a city east of Tel Aviv.Photo by Eyal Warshavsky/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

The judicial overhaul plan of Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s government, introduced in January, has thrown the country into its most severe domesti...

Read more: Israel's military reservists are joining protests – potentially transforming a political crisis...

Reaction to bronze sculpture of Coretta and Martin Luther King Jr. in Boston hasn't been good – and that's not bad for art that shatters conventions

  • Written by Kristin Ann Hass, Professor of American Culture, University of Michigan
imageThe Coretta and Martin Luther King Jr. memorial sculpture at Boston Common is called 'The Embrace.' Lane Turner/The Boston Globe via Getty Images

As an acclaimed photographer and conceptual artist, Hank Willis Thomas has grown accustomed to criticisms of his unconventional art and concepts of identity.

But even Thomas had never experienced anything...

Read more: Reaction to bronze sculpture of Coretta and Martin Luther King Jr. in Boston hasn't been good –...

40 years ago 'A Nation at Risk' warned of a 'rising tide of mediocrity' in US schools – has anything changed?

  • Written by Morgan Polikoff, Associate Professor of Education, University of Southern California
imageAcademic gains made over the past four decades have begun to erode.Troy Aossey/The Image Bank via Getty Images

The National Commission on Excellence in Education’s release of a report titled “A Nation at Risk” in 1983 was a pivotal point in the history of American education. The report used dire language, lamenting that “the...

Read more: 40 years ago 'A Nation at Risk' warned of a 'rising tide of mediocrity' in US schools – has...

How do superconductors work? A physicist explains what it means to have resistance-free electricity

  • Written by Mishkat Bhattacharya, Professor of Physics and Astronomy, Rochester Institute of Technology
imageMagnetic levitation is just one of the interesting attributes that make superconductors so interesting.Mark Garlick/Science Photo Library vie Getty Images

The modern world runs on electricity, and wires are what carry that electricity to every light, television, heating system, cellphone and computer on the planet. Unfortunately, on average, about 5...

Read more: How do superconductors work? A physicist explains what it means to have resistance-free electricity

Public radio can help solve the local news crisis -- but that would require expanding staff and coverage

  • Written by Thomas E. Patterson, Bradlee Professor of Government and the Press, Harvard Kennedy School
imageCan public radio fill the hole left by the decline of local news outlets?Talaj/iStock / Getty Images Plus

Since 2005, more than 2,500 local newspapers, most of them weeklies, have closed, with more closures on the way.

Responses to the decline have ranged from luring billionaires to buy local dailies to encouraging digital startups. But the number...

Read more: Public radio can help solve the local news crisis -- but that would require expanding staff and...

Federal Reserve’s ‘soft landing’ goal has become bumpier with rate hike plan hit by bank turbulence

  • Written by Ryan Herzog, Associate Professor of Economics, Gonzaga University
imageA recession-free landing for the Fed may be harder now.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Federal Reserve policymakers have targeted a “soft landing” for the U.S. economy since beginning their effort a year ago to tame runaway inflation by hiking interest rates. That is, they believed they could do so without sending the U.S. into recession.

But the...

Read more: Federal Reserve’s ‘soft landing’ goal has become bumpier with rate hike plan hit by bank turbulence

Back to the Moon: A space lawyer and planetary scientist on what it will take to share the benefits of new lunar exploration – podcast

  • Written by Daniel Merino, Associate Science Editor & Co-Host of The Conversation Weekly Podcast, The Conversation
imageWithin the next year or two, people will set foot on the surface of the Moon for the first time in 50 years.NASA

NASA is planning to put U.S. astronauts back on the surface of the Moon by the end of 2024. This mission is just the beginning of what is shaping up to be a historic few decades in space exploration, as both the U.S. and China have plans...

Read more: Back to the Moon: A space lawyer and planetary scientist on what it will take to share the...

Infant formula shortages forced some parents to feed their babies in less healthy ways

  • Written by Jessica A. Marino, Doctoral Student in Health Psychology, University of California, Merced
imageBabies still need to eat even when formula is hard to come by.Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

One third of families who relied on formula to feed their babies during the COVID-19 pandemic were forced by severe infant formula shortages to resort to suboptimal feeding...

Read more: Infant formula shortages forced some parents to feed their babies in less healthy ways

Infant formula shortages forced some parents to feed their babies in less healthy ways

  • Written by Jessica A. Marino, Doctoral Student in Health Psychology, University of California, Merced
imageBabies still need to eat even when formula is hard to come by.Joseph Prezioso/AFP via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

One third of families who relied on formula to feed their babies during the COVID-19 pandemic were forced by severe infant formula shortages to resort to suboptimal feeding...

Read more: Infant formula shortages forced some parents to feed their babies in less healthy ways

More Articles ...

  1. Scientists are using machine learning to forecast bird migration and identify birds in flight by their calls
  2. Scientists are using machine learning to forecast bird migration and identify birds in flight by their calls
  3. This course asks, 'What is mindfulness?' – but don't expect a clear-cut answer
  4. This course asks, 'What is mindfulness?' – but don't expect a clear-cut answer
  5. How 'Succession' feeds the hidden fantasies of its well-to-do viewers
  6. How 'Succession' feeds the hidden fantasies of its well-to-do viewers
  7. NRA's path to recovery from financial woes leaves the gun group vulnerable to new problems
  8. NRA's path to recovery from financial woes leaves the gun group vulnerable to new problems
  9. Should the US ban TikTok? Can it? A cybersecurity expert explains the risks the app poses and the challenges to blocking it
  10. Should the US ban TikTok? Can it? A cybersecurity expert explains the risks the app poses and the challenges to blocking it
  11. Federal Reserve bows to bank-crisis fears with quarter-point rate hike, letting up a little in its fight against inflation
  12. Federal Reserve bows to bank-crisis fears with quarter-point rate hike, letting up a little in its fight against inflation
  13. Researchers turned superglue into a recyclable, cheap, oil-free plastic alternative
  14. Researchers turned superglue into a recyclable, cheap, oil-free plastic alternative
  15. In Congress, breaking unwritten rules that encouraged civility and enabled things to get done is becoming the new normal
  16. In Congress, breaking unwritten rules that encouraged civility and enabled things to get done is becoming the new normal
  17. The view from Moscow and Beijing: What peace in Ukraine and a post-conflict world look like to Xi and Putin
  18. The view from Moscow and Beijing: What peace in Ukraine and a post-conflict world look like to Xi and Putin
  19. Who keeps the engagement ring after a breakup? 2 law professors explain why you might want a prenup for your diamond
  20. Who keeps the engagement ring after a breakup? 2 law professors explain why you might want a prenup for your diamond
  21. Building better brain collaboration online – despite scientific squabbles, the decade-long Human Brain Project brought measurable success to neuroscience collaboration
  22. Building better brain collaboration online – despite scientific squabbles, the decade-long Human Brain Project brought measurable success to neuroscience collaboration
  23. Mounting research points to health harms from cannabis, THC and CBD use during pregnancy, adolescence and other periods of rapid development
  24. Mounting research points to health harms from cannabis, THC and CBD use during pregnancy, adolescence and other periods of rapid development
  25. Moving in with your partner? Talking about these 3 things first can smooth the way, according to a couples therapist
  26. Moving in with your partner? Talking about these 3 things first can smooth the way, according to a couples therapist
  27. The Amazon is not safe under Brazil's new president – a roads plan could push it past its breaking point
  28. The Amazon is not safe under Brazil's new president – a roads plan could push it past its breaking point
  29. This course uses 'Abbott Elementary' to examine critical issues in urban education
  30. This course uses 'Abbott Elementary' to examine critical issues in urban education
  31. El trastorno dismórfico corporal es más común que los trastornos alimentarios como la anorexia y la bulimia, aunque pocas personas conocen sus peligros
  32. El trastorno dismórfico corporal es más común que los trastornos alimentarios como la anorexia y la bulimia, aunque pocas personas conocen sus peligros
  33. Calls for a 'green' Ramadan revive Islam's long tradition of sustainability and care for the planet
  34. Calls for a 'green' Ramadan revive Islam's long tradition of sustainability and care for the planet
  35. In a Roman villa at the center of a nasty inheritance dispute, a Caravaggio masterpiece is hidden from the public
  36. In a Roman villa at the center of a nasty inheritance dispute, a Caravaggio masterpiece is hidden from the public
  37. What does 'moral hazard' mean? A scholar of financial regulation explains why it's risky for the government to rescue banks
  38. Ramadan finds greater recognition in America's public schools
  39. Ramadan finds greater recognition in America's public schools
  40. A friend who's more boss than BFF may be harmful for teens' mental health
  41. A friend who's more boss than BFF may be harmful for teens' mental health
  42. Poisons are a potent tool for murder in fiction – a toxicologist explains how some dangerous chemicals kill
  43. Poisons are a potent tool for murder in fiction – a toxicologist explains how some dangerous chemicals kill
  44. Increases in opioid overdoses in Pennsylvania varied by county during the COVID-19 pandemic
  45. Increases in opioid overdoses in Pennsylvania varied by county during the COVID-19 pandemic
  46. Seabirds that swallow ocean plastic waste have scarring in their stomachs – scientists have named this disease 'plasticosis'
  47. A string of assassinations in Afghanistan point to ISIS-K resurgence – and US officials warn of possible attacks on American interests in next 6 months
  48. Trump's unprecedented call for protests is the latest sign of his aim to degrade America's institutions
  49. Is Wikipedia a good source? 2 college librarians explain when to use the online encyclopedia – and when to avoid it
  50. Worst bank turmoil since 2008 means Federal Reserve is damned if it does and damned if it doesn't in decision over interest rates