NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Inside Venezuela's crisis: 8 essential reads

  • Written by Catesby Holmes, Global Affairs Editor, The Conversation US
imageAP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan

Since December 2014, a recession turned national emergency has left millions of Venezuelans impoverished, hungry and desperate. An estimated 54 percent of Venezuelan children are now malnourished.

As an editor on the Americas desk, this year I’ve asked numerous Venezuelan scholars to help readers understand the many...

Read more: Inside Venezuela's crisis: 8 essential reads

Inside Venezuela's crisis: 7 essential reads

  • Written by Catesby Holmes, Global Affairs Editor, The Conversation US
imageAP Photo/Ricardo Mazalan

Since December 2014, a recession turned national emergency has left millions of Venezuelans impoverished, hungry and desperate. An estimated 54 percent of Venezuelan children are now malnourished.

As an editor on the Americas desk, this year I’ve asked numerous Venezuelan scholars to help readers understand the many...

Read more: Inside Venezuela's crisis: 7 essential reads

How the Catholic Church’s hierarchy makes it difficult to punish sexual abusers

  • Written by Mathew Schmalz, Associate Professor of Religion, College of the Holy Cross
imageCardinal Bernard Law in Rome in 2011AP Photo/Gregorio Borgia

Cardinal Bernard Law died on Wednesday, Dec. 20, in Rome. Law was Archbishop of Boston, a position of prestige in the Roman Catholic Church in the United States. He had wide political connections, including with the Bush family. He publicly denounced Catholic politicians who supported...

Read more: How the Catholic Church’s hierarchy makes it difficult to punish sexual abusers

H.G. Wells vs. George Orwell: Their debate whether science is humanity’s best hope continues today

  • Written by Richard Gunderman, Chancellor's Professor of Medicine, Liberal Arts, and Philanthropy, Indiana University
image'Man Combating Ignorance' – what's science's role?Century of Progress Records, 1927-1952, University of Illinois at Chicago Library, CC BY-NC-ND

In the midst of contemporary science’s stunning discoveries and innovations – for example, 2017 alone brought the editing of a human embryo’s genes, the location of an eighth...

Read more: H.G. Wells vs. George Orwell: Their debate whether science is humanity’s best hope continues today

Will Americans finally start fighting back against tax cuts for the rich?

  • Written by Stephanie Leiser, Lecturer in Public Policy, University of Michigan

The 60 percent of Americans who believe that the GOP tax package will mostly help the wealthiest among us are right, according to an analysis by the Tax Policy Center.

But will widespread disapproval translate into political costs or electoral losses for Republicans? Will Americans decide they are finally fed up with over half a century of soaring...

Read more: Will Americans finally start fighting back against tax cuts for the rich?

Disney's potential 21st Century Fox merger continues troubling trend of media consolidation

  • Written by Margot Susca, Professorial Lecturer, American University School of Communication
imageDo we really want one conglomerate to control so much of the media landscape?Sergsta/Shutterstock.com

In the U.S., only a handful of media companies control what children and adults watch and read.

Now that number could get even smaller.

The proposed US$52.4 billion merger of Disney and 21st Century Fox would merge the first and third largest film...

Read more: Disney's potential 21st Century Fox merger continues troubling trend of media consolidation

The pall that the tax package is casting over charities

  • Written by Patrick Rooney, Executive Associate Dean for Academic Programs, Professor of Economics and Philanthropic Studies, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
imageChanges to the tax code may strike a blow to the charitable world.Shutter OK/Shutterstock.com

The tax-code overhaul that Republican lawmakers approved and Trump is expected to sign into law will raise the price of charitable giving for millions of Americans, surely reducing how much money the nation gives.

As an economist and a scholar of...

Read more: The pall that the tax package is casting over charities

The pall that the tax law is casting over charities

  • Written by Patrick Rooney, Executive Associate Dean for Academic Programs, Professor of Economics and Philanthropic Studies, Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
imageChanges to the tax code may strike a blow to the charitable world.Shutter OK/Shutterstock.com

The tax-code overhaul that Republican lawmakers approved and Trump signed into law will raise the price of charitable giving for millions of Americans, surely reducing how much money the nation gives.

As an economist and a scholar of philanthropy who...

Read more: The pall that the tax law is casting over charities

What the 'California Dream' means to indigenous peoples

  • Written by Olivia Chilcote, Assistant Professor Department of American Indian Studies, San Diego State University

The California Dream is a myth for many California Indian peoples and tribes.

Since settlers arrived, California Indians’ reality has largely been one of land dispossession, cultural assimilation and even genocide.

If California Indians were to design their own dream it would place decolonization at its core. Decolonization is the undoing of...

Read more: What the 'California Dream' means to indigenous peoples

Better ways to foster solar innovation and save jobs

  • Written by Edward Barbier, Professor of Economics, Colorado State University
imageMost of the growing number of jobs in the solar industry have more to do with maintaining and installing panels than manufacturing them.only_kim/Shutterstock.com

The U.S. solar industry is nervously awaiting President Donald Trump’s decision whether to impose punitive duties on imported solar panels and related equipment or even restrict some...

Read more: Better ways to foster solar innovation and save jobs

More Articles ...

  1. Who forced the cigarette companies to run those anti-smoking ads?
  2. Sí o sí, se celebra la Navidad en Puerto Rico
  3. Puerto Ricans aren't giving up on Christmas
  4. Why parents should check twice before offering holiday sweets
  5. During the holidays, giving gifts to the dead can help you cope with grief
  6. The 2017 national security strategy: A scorecard
  7. Untrustworthy memories make it hard to shop ethically
  8. Why Americans will never agree on oil drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge
  9. The US may be in for a tough flu season: 4 questions answered
  10. What Kwanzaa means for black Americans
  11. A former Israeli diplomat answers 5 questions about Jerusalem
  12. More businesses are trying mobile apps to lure and keep consumers
  13. Why finding new HIV targets takes so long: Some basics about basic research
  14. GOP tax plan doubles down on policies that are crushing the middle class
  15. Climate change will displace millions in coming decades. Nations should prepare now to help them
  16. Exxon Mobil's about-face on climate disclosure
  17. Market bubbles and sonic attacks: Mass hysterias will never go away
  18. The dangerous belief that white people are under attack
  19. What is a soul, anyway? Pullman's 'La Belle Sauvage' tackles the big questions
  20. Why justice is more important than the rule of law
  21. Why Trump's plan to forbid spouses of H-1B visa holders to work is a bad idea
  22. Tips from negotiation experts for truly happy holidays
  23. Skip fights about digital devices over the holidays – instead, let them bring your family together
  24. Why the Republican tax plan can help put American youths back to work
  25. The travel industry has sparked a backlash against tourists by stressing quantity over quality
  26. Black voters won Alabama for the Dems. Here's what they need in return
  27. Some new nonprofits take off, others flop – and nobody knows why
  28. An archaeological dig in Israel provides clues to how feasting became an important ritual
  29. When cringeworthy gifts are worse than inconsiderate
  30. What Doug Jones's win means for Mitch McConnell, Steve Bannon and the Democrats
  31. Can math predict what you’ll do next?
  32. Mercury from industrialized nations is polluting the Arctic – here's how it gets there
  33. With FCC's net neutrality ruling, the US could lose its lead in online consumer protection
  34. Alabama and #MeToo's disruptive force
  35. A parent's guide to ending sexual harassment and assault
  36. Why there's no place like home for the holidays
  37. Trump's right about one thing: The US Senate should end its 60-vote majority
  38. Stinkhorns, truffles, smuts: The amazing diversity – and possible decline – of mushrooms and other fungi
  39. Harvard students and DOJ will find answers elusive in quest to learn about admissions decisions
  40. You're not going to get accepted into a top university on merit alone
  41. Designer proteins that package genetic material could help deliver gene therapy
  42. How Republican missteps turned Alabama blue
  43. You (and most of the millions of holiday travelers you encounter) are washing your hands wrong
  44. California needs to rethink urban fire risk, starting with where it builds houses
  45. Will China's crackdown on 'foreign garbage' force wealthy countries to recycle more of their own waste?
  46. What 'Last Tango in Paris' teaches my students about sexual ethics
  47. Study reveals racial inequality in Mexico, disproving its 'race-blind' rhetoric
  48. Gold rush opportunists, hippie goat ladies, Latino newcomers: California entrepreneurs dream of cheese
  49. 3 myths about the poor that Republicans are using to support slashing US safety net
  50. Can college 'promise' programs deliver?