NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Vatican synod is opening the door a bit wider for Catholic women − but they’ve been knocking for more than 100 years

  • Written by Carol E. Harrison, Professor of History, University of South Carolina
imageSister Nathalie Becquart, the first female undersecretary at the Vatican's Synod of Bishops, walks to the Vatican on May 29, 2023. AP Photo/Alessandra Tarantino

In 2021, Sister Nathalie Becquart became the first woman to vote at any Vatican meeting when Pope Francis appointed her undersecretary to the synod, a gathering of bishops whose second...

Read more: Vatican synod is opening the door a bit wider for Catholic women − but they’ve been knocking for...

Happiness class is helping clinically depressed school teachers become emotionally healthy − with a cheery assist from Aristotle

  • Written by John Sommers-Flanagan, Clinical Psychologist and Professor of Counseling, University of Montana
imageThis course is more than just suggesting that you 'cheer up' and 'look on the bright side.'akinbostanci/E+ via Getty Imagesimage

Uncommon Courses is an occasional series from The Conversation U.S. highlighting unconventional approaches to teaching.

Title of Course

Evidence-Based Happiness for Teachers

What prompted the idea for the course?

I was...

Read more: Happiness class is helping clinically depressed school teachers become emotionally healthy − with...

Swing-state GOP leaders amplified election denial in 2020 − and may do so again

  • Written by Sadie Dempsey, Ph.D. Candidate in Sociology, University of Wisconsin-Madison
imageWill local Republican Parties again serve as megaphones for election disinformation, as they did in 2020?AP Photo/Wong Maye-E, File

With the 2024 election just weeks away, former President Donald Trump continues to spread false claims of fraud in the 2020 election. He also insists without evidence that the same may happen this year.

In a Sept. 7,...

Read more: Swing-state GOP leaders amplified election denial in 2020 − and may do so again

San Francisco is suing the EPA over how specific water pollution permits should be

  • Written by Robin Kundis Craig, Professor of Law, University of Kansas
imageBaker Beach and other San Francisco city beaches are sometimes closed for swimming due to sewage discharges.Tayfun Coskun/Anadolu via Getty Images

The U.S. Supreme Court will test how flexible the EPA and states can be in regulating water pollution under the Clean Water Act when it hears oral argument in City and County of San Francisco v....

Read more: San Francisco is suing the EPA over how specific water pollution permits should be

Millions of people across the US use well water, but very few test it often enough to make sure it’s safe

  • Written by Gabriel Lade, Associate Professor of Economics, Macalester College
imageSerious water contaminants such as nitrate may not have any detectable taste or odor.Willie B. Thomas/Digital Vision via Getty Images

About 23 million U.S. households depend on private wells as their primary drinking water source. These homeowners are entirely responsible for ensuring that the water from their wells is safe for human consumption.

Mu...

Read more: Millions of people across the US use well water, but very few test it often enough to make sure...

If you think grocery prices take a big bite out of your paycheck in the US, check out the rest of the world

  • Written by Peter A. Coclanis, Professor of History; Director of the Global Research Institute, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
imageAt what price?Charly Triballeau/AFP Getty Images

Though cynics may question her motives, Kamala Harris’ recent call to ban price gouging on groceries has received a lot of attention – and for good reason.

The cost of food has been a big concern for Americans since the height of the COVID-19 pandemic, with U.S. food prices rising 25% betwe...

Read more: If you think grocery prices take a big bite out of your paycheck in the US, check out the rest of...

Evacuating in disasters like Hurricane Milton isn’t simple – there are reasons people stay in harm’s way, and it’s not just stubbornness

  • Written by Carson MacPherson-Krutsky, Research Associate, Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado Boulder
imageEvacuation is more difficult for people with health and mobility issues.Ted Richardson/For The Washington Post via Getty Images

As Hurricane Milton roared ashore near Sarasota, Florida, tens of thousands of people were in evacuation shelters. Hundreds of thousands more had fled coastal regions ahead of the storm, crowding highways headed north and...

Read more: Evacuating in disasters like Hurricane Milton isn’t simple – there are reasons people stay in...

Evacuating in disasters like Hurricane Milton isn’t simple – there are reasons people stay in harm’s way

  • Written by Carson MacPherson-Krutsky, Research Associate, Natural Hazards Center, University of Colorado Boulder
imageEvacuation is more difficult for people with health and mobility issues.Ted Richardson/For The Washington Post via Getty Images

As Hurricane Milton roared ashore near Sarasota, Florida, tens of thousands of people were in evacuation shelters. Hundreds of thousands more had fled coastal regions ahead of the storm, crowding highways headed north and...

Read more: Evacuating in disasters like Hurricane Milton isn’t simple – there are reasons people stay in...

US inflation rate fell to 2.4% in September − here’s what that means for interest rates and markets

  • Written by Jason Reed, Associate Teaching Professor of Finance, University of Notre Dame
imageAll eyes on the CPI.Sila Damrongsaringkan/Getty Images Plus

It wasn’t that long ago that the Federal Reserve, the central bank for the United States, was worrying that annual inflation would surpass 9% in the middle of 2022. The U.S. economy hadn’t seen prices rise that fast since the 1980s, and most everyone feared that a series of...

Read more: US inflation rate fell to 2.4% in September − here’s what that means for interest rates and markets

Is childproofing the internet constitutional? A tech law expert draws out the issues

  • Written by Meg Leta Jones, Associate Professor of Technology Law & Policy, Georgetown University
imageThe U.S. Supreme Court and Congress are wrestling with how to protect kids online.Meg Leta Jones, CC BY-ND

Mounting pressure to regulate children’s use of technology in the United States raises the question: Is childproofing the internet constitutional?

In response to significant political pressure stemming from alarming revelations about...

Read more: Is childproofing the internet constitutional? A tech law expert draws out the issues

More Articles ...

  1. Medicare vs. Medicare Advantage: sales pitches are often from biased sources, the choices can be overwhelming and impartial help is not equally available to all
  2. Charging, not range, is becoming a top concern for electric car drivers
  3. LGBTQ rights: Where do Harris and Trump stand?
  4. Why Trump accuses people of wrongdoing he himself committed − an explanation of projection
  5. Caitlin Clark, Christine Brennan and how racial stereotypes persist in the media’s WNBA coverage
  6. A realistic statue of Mary giving birth was criticized, then vandalized − but saints and artists have often reimagined Christ’s birth
  7. ‘Cajun Navy’ volunteers who participate in search-and-rescue operations after hurricanes are forming long-lasting organizations
  8. Machine learning cracked the protein-folding problem and won the 2024 Nobel Prize in chemistry
  9. Buyer beware: Off-brand Ozempic, Zepbound and other weight loss products carry undisclosed risks for consumers
  10. Columbus who? Decolonizing the calendar in Latin America
  11. Blitz of political attack ads in Pennsylvania and other swing states may be doing candidates and voters more harm than good
  12. How a subfield of physics led to breakthroughs in AI – and from there to this year’s Nobel Prize
  13. Misspoke: The long and winding road to becoming a political weasel word
  14. DEA could reclassify marijuana to a less restrictive category – a drug policy expert weighs the pros and cons
  15. So you don’t like Trump or Harris – here’s why it’s still best to vote for one of them
  16. Though home to about 50 white extremist groups, Ohio’s social and political landscape is undergoing rapid racial change
  17. The woman who revolutionized the fantasy genre is finally getting her due
  18. 5 kinds of American evangelicals and their voting patterns
  19. Harris proposes that Medicare cover more in-home health care, filling a large gap for older Americans and their caregivers
  20. Nobel Prize in physics spotlights key breakthroughs in AI revolution − making machines that learn
  21. How foreign operations are manipulating social media to influence your views
  22. Trump and Harris are sharply divided on science, but share common ground on US technology policy
  23. Can Montana’s ‘last rural Democrat’ survive another election?
  24. Is it COVID-19? Flu? At-home rapid tests could help you and your doctor decide on a treatment plan
  25. Kamala Harris has spoken of her racial backgrounds − but a shared identity isn’t enough to attract supporters
  26. ‘No antidote for bad polls’: Recalling the New York Times’ 1956 election experiment in shoe-leather reporting
  27. Why wildfires started by human activities can be more destructive and harder to contain
  28. European court ruling finds just cause to award soccer players greater freedom of movement
  29. Swing state voters along the Great Lakes love cleaner water and beaches − and candidates from both parties have long fished for support there
  30. Hurricane Milton explodes into a powerful Category 5 storm as it heads for Florida − here’s how rapid intensification works
  31. Many stable atoms have ‘magic numbers’ of protons and neutrons − 75 years ago, 2 physicists discovered their special properties
  32. MicroRNA is the Nobel-winning master regulator of the genome – researchers are learning to treat disease by harnessing how it controls genes
  33. How Hurricane Helene became a deadly disaster across six states
  34. Air pollution inside Philly’s subway is much worse than on the streets
  35. When and why do girls start forming cliques?
  36. NASA wants to send humans to Mars in the 2030s − a crewed mission could unlock some of the red planet’s geologic mysteries
  37. Why would people vote for Kamala Harris? 5 things to understand about why her supporters back her
  38. How a newspaper revolution sparked protesters and influencers, disinformation and the Civil War
  39. A year ago, the hostages were a rallying point for solidarity in Israel – now, their families are symbols of the country’s sharp divides
  40. Colleges could benefit from taking a data-driven look at hostility toward Jews on campus
  41. Palestinians want to choose their own leaders – a year of war has distanced them further from this democratic goal
  42. A year of escalating conflict in the Middle East has ushered in a new era of regional displacement
  43. Dockworkers pause strike after Biden administration’s appeal to patriotism hits the mark
  44. A year after Hamas attack, more continuity than change for the Palestinians and Israel
  45. Some online conspiracy-spreaders don’t even believe the lies they’re spewing
  46. Trees’ own beneficial microbiome could lead to discovery of new treatments to fight citrus greening disease
  47. Nuclear rockets could travel to Mars in half the time − but designing the reactors that would power them isn’t easy
  48. Low pay, high staff turnover and employee burnout took a toll on social service nonprofits during the COVID-19 pandemic − new research
  49. As Yelp turns 20, online reviews continue to confound and confuse shoppers
  50. Kamala Harris illustrates how complex identity is − and the pressure many multiracial people feel to put themselves in one ‘box’