NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

With bodies piling up, the war on Mexican journalists has no end in sight

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

During Pope Francis' recent tour of Mexico, he denounced the country’s illicit drug trade, while calling for social programs to lift up the poor.

One thing he didn’t explicitly touch on: the precarious situation Mexican journalists find themselves in. In fact, on February 9 – four days before the pope’s arrival – the...

Read more: With bodies piling up, the war on Mexican journalists has no end in sight

DoD detainee photos raise disturbing questions about transparency

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

A shirtless man, his back toward the camera, stands before a beige wall, a scabbed abrasion on his left shoulder blade and a small ruler affixed to his skin, for scale.

Scraped knees, swollen ankles, grainy black and white collages of unnamed men, sitting, crouching, kneeling, in various phases of capture and confinement.

This is what transparency...

Read more: DoD detainee photos raise disturbing questions about transparency

Pregnant, in prison and facing health risks: prenatal care for incarcerated women

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageIt's estimated that 3 to 4 percent of women are pregnant when they arrive at prison.Pregnancy test and handcuffs image via www.shutterstock.com.

Between 1980 and 2010, the number of women in prison in the United States increased by 646 percent, going from 15,000 women to 113,000. Although accurate statistics are hard to obtain, it’s estimated...

Read more: Pregnant, in prison and facing health risks: prenatal care for incarcerated women

Straight A students may not be the best innovators

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageHow do innovators acquire their skills?Daniel Foster, CC BY-NC-SA

Demand for innovation is at an all-time high. Innovation is now recognized as being key to economic growth strategies in the United States, Canada and countries in the European Union.

As a result, there is an increased need to understand what drives innovation. Certainly traditional...

Read more: Straight A students may not be the best innovators

Solving 'Darwin's Paradox': why coral island hotspots exist in an oceanic desert

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageProductivity hotspots in an otherwise nutrient-poor ocean. High abundances of plankton-eating fish on an Indo-Pacific coral reef.Zafer Kizilkaya, CC BY-SA

It was Charles Darwin, almost 200 years ago, who first asked how it could be that coral reefs could flourish in relatively barren parts of the Pacific Ocean. This conundrum subsequently became...

Read more: Solving 'Darwin's Paradox': why coral island hotspots exist in an oceanic desert

When do children learn to write? Earlier than you might think

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor
imageYoung children are writing even before they are reading.Steven Yeh, CC BY-NC-ND

We typically think of writing as something that is out of reach for preschool children. After all, young children can’t write recognizable letters, and they can’t spell words.

We have been studying young children’s knowledge about writing in our...

Read more: When do children learn to write? Earlier than you might think

Why statin users should still get the flu shot, even if cholesterol drugs make it less effective

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

Every year in the United States, about 226,000 people are hospitalized because of the flu, and 23,000 die. And about 80-90 percent of flu-related deaths occur in people over 65 years old.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says that the best way to avoid getting the flu is to get vaccinated. We know that in the elderly, compared to...

Read more: Why statin users should still get the flu shot, even if cholesterol drugs make it less effective

Five years of war in Syria: five lessons Western leaders haven't learned

  • Written by The Conversation Contributor

The ink had barely dried on the Munich ceasefire agreement announced on February 11 by U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry when only a few days later Syrians and others were casting doubt that it could mitigate the fighting and suffering that Syria has endured for five years.

Why such skepticism? Shouldn’t the world be open to any initiative...

Read more: Five years of war in Syria: five lessons Western leaders haven't learned

More Articles ...

  1. Curbing cravings: can kitchen chaos influence cookie consumption?
  2. Eying exomoons in the search for E.T.
  3. What Scalia's death means for environment and climate
  4. Our finances are a mess – could behavioral science help clean them up?
  5. Chicago police shooting data may reveal new ways to reduce deaths and racial disparity
  6. Hollywood's piracy problem
  7. Reimagining the Internet as a mosaic of regional cultures
  8. Is your child taking a test? When is the right time?
  9. The little-understood connection between Islamic terror and drug profits
  10. Will anyone be prosecuted in the Flint water crisis?
  11. Why the IRS was just hacked – again – and what the feds can do about it
  12. Trump's anti-trade tirades recall GOP's protectionist past
  13. Could FDA e-cigarette regulations help more people quit smoking?
  14. How satellites can help control the spread of diseases such as Zika
  15. How should the U.S. government help coal communities?
  16. There's a new addiction on campus: Problematic Internet Use (PIU)
  17. TPP trade pact still needs improvements to protect governments from foreign suits
  18. Four steps to appointing a Supreme Court justice
  19. Justice Antonin Scalia: more quotable than influential
  20. The Supreme Court just handed the next president a powerful lever to control U.S. climate policy
  21. Bernie Sanders isn't a woman, but is he a better feminist than Hillary Clinton?
  22. Ted Cruz's linguistic chutzpah
  23. Facing a physician shortage, can we leave medical school grads on the sidelines?
  24. In blocking EPA Clean Power Plan, is the Supreme Court wading deeper into politics?
  25. Why music education needs to incorporate more diversity
  26. Yes, robots will steal our jobs, but don't worry, we'll get new ones
  27. Are dating apps killing long-term relationships?
  28. The logic of journal embargoes: why we have to wait for scientific news
  29. What happens when LIGO texts you to say it's detected one of Einstein's predicted gravitational waves
  30. Many low-income students use only their phone to get online. What are they missing?
  31. Dry is the new normal: Southwest U.S. has gotten drier and more prone to droughts
  32. The police beating that opened America's eyes to Jim Crow's brutality
  33. Should you be my Valentine? Research helps identify good and bad romantic relationships
  34. UV radiation: the risks and benefits of a healthy glow
  35. How punitive, omniscient gods may have encouraged the expansion of human society
  36. The Conversation US is hiring in Atlanta
  37. Did independent voters decide the New Hampshire primary?
  38. Exposed to a deluge of digital photos, we're feeling the psychological effects of image overload
  39. Obama's speech at Baltimore mosque was powerful, but was anyone listening?
  40. Shouldn't there be a time limit on Mickey's copyright?
  41. Utilities, solar energy and the fight for your roof
  42. Sanders, Trump win big in polarized New Hampshire as voters revolt against the establishment
  43. Are tighter EPA controls on mercury pollution worth it?
  44. Clinton, Sanders and the changing face of the Democratic Party
  45. Feeling sleepy? You might be at risk of falsely confessing to a crime you did not commit
  46. The Federal response in Malheur and far right extremism
  47. Why schools need to introduce computing in all subjects
  48. In a New York City neighborhood, the challenges – and potential – for America's urban future
  49. How should America fund its highways in the 21st century?
  50. How the black middle class was attacked by Woodrow Wilson’s administration