NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

3 years on from coup, economic sanctions look unlikely to push Myanmar back to democracy

  • Written by Charmaine Willis, Visiting Assistant Professor of Political Science, Skidmore College
imageSanctions have failed to prevent Myanmar's military from obtaining hardware.STR/AFP via Getty Images

When Myanmar’s military seized back control of the country in February 2021 after a decade-long democratic interlude, the international community reached for a familiar tool: economic sanctions.

The coup led several countries, including the...

Read more: 3 years on from coup, economic sanctions look unlikely to push Myanmar back to democracy

Funding for refugees has long been politicized − punitive action against UNRWA and Palestinians fits that pattern

  • Written by Nicholas R. Micinski, Assistant Professor of Political Science and International Affairs, University of Maine
imagePalestinians await the distribution of UNRWA flour.Abed Zagout/Anadolu via Getty Images

At least a dozen countries, including the U.S., have suspended funding to the UNRWA, the United Nations agency responsible for delivering aid to Palestinian refugees.

This follows allegations made by Israel that 12 UNRWA employees participated in the Oct. 7,...

Read more: Funding for refugees has long been politicized − punitive action against UNRWA and Palestinians...

Are social media apps ‘dangerous products’? 2 scholars explain how the companies rely on young users but fail to protect them

  • Written by Joan Donovan, Assistant Professor of Journalism and Emerging Media Studies, Boston University
imageThe CEOs of Discord, Snap, TikTok, X and Meta prepare to testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Jan. 31, 2024.Alex Wong/Getty Images

“You have blood on your hands.”

“I’m sorry for everything you have all been through.”

These quotes, the first from Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C., speaking to Meta CEO Mark...

Read more: Are social media apps ‘dangerous products’? 2 scholars explain how the companies rely on young...

Republicans and Democrats consider each other immoral – even when treated fairly and kindly by the opposition

  • Written by Phillip McGarry, Ph.D. Candidate in Experimental Psychology, University of Tennessee
imageHow a political opponent acted didn't change participants' harsh moral judgments.wildpixel/iStock via Getty Images

Both Republicans and Democrats regarded people with opposing political views as less moral than people in their own party, even when their political opposites acted fairly or kindly toward them, according to experiments mycolleaguesandI...

Read more: Republicans and Democrats consider each other immoral – even when treated fairly and kindly by the...

AI can help − and hurt − student creativity

  • Written by Sabrina Habib, Associate Professor, University of South Carolina

Teachers across the country are grappling with whether to view AI tools like ChatGPT as friend or foe in the classroom. My research shows that the answer isn’t always simple. It can be both.

Teaching students to be creative thinkers rather than rely on AI for answers is the key to answering this question. That’s what my team and I found...

Read more: AI can help − and hurt − student creativity

Why treason is a key topic in Trump’s 14th Amendment appeal to the Supreme Court

  • Written by Mark A. Graber, University System of Maryland Regents Professor of Law, University of Maryland
imageDonald Trump's actions on Jan. 6, 2021, are key to questions about his eligibility to hold office.AP Photo/Jacquelyn Martin

As oral arguments approach in former President Donald Trump’s U.S. Supreme Court appeal of a Colorado Supreme Court decision, many friend-of-the-court briefsin the case bring up a subject not much found in public...

Read more: Why treason is a key topic in Trump’s 14th Amendment appeal to the Supreme Court

Supreme Court word-count limits for lawyers, explained in 1,026 words

  • Written by Derek H. Kiernan-Johnson, Teaching Professor of Law, University of Colorado Boulder
imageLawyers write too much. That's why the Supreme Court and other U.S. courts impose word limits on them.siraanamwong/ iStock / Getty Images Plus

The dispute over former President Donald Trump’s eligibility to appear on the Colorado ballot will come to a head on Feb. 8, 2024, when the U.S. Supreme Court holds oral arguments in the case. Dozens...

Read more: Supreme Court word-count limits for lawyers, explained in 1,026 words

Norman Jewison’s ‘Rollerball’ depicted a world in which corporations controlled all information – is this dystopian vision becoming reality?

  • Written by Matthew Jordan, Associate Professor of Media Studies, Penn State
imageJonathan E., played by James Caan, competes as the owners watch from the stands.MGM

If the films of Norman Jewison, who died on Jan. 22, 2024, had a unifying theme, it was how his characters searched for meaning and questioned the rules of their worlds.

No matter the genre of the scores of films he directed – from “In the Heat of the...

Read more: Norman Jewison’s ‘Rollerball’ depicted a world in which corporations controlled all information –...

Suicide has reached epidemic proportions in the US − yet medical students still don’t receive adequate training to treat suicidal patients

  • Written by Rodolfo Bonnin, Assistant Dean for Institutional Knowledge Management and Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Health, Florida International University
imageEvery year, more than 12 million Americans have suicidal thoughts.Djavan Rodriguez/Moment via Getty Images

Suicide in the U.S. is a societal epidemic and a staggering public health crisis that demands attention from medical experts.

In 2021, someone in the U.S. died by suicide every 11 minutes, according to the Centers for Disease Control and...

Read more: Suicide has reached epidemic proportions in the US − yet medical students still don’t receive...

More Articles ...

  1. With the economy looking bright enough, the Federal Reserve seems content to play the waiting game
  2. Super Bowl ads: It’s getting harder for commercials to score with consumers
  3. More than a year after the death of an environmental activist, questions remain on the dangerousness of the Stop Cop City movement near Atlanta
  4. ‘Jaws’ portrayed sharks as monsters 50 years ago, but it also inspired a generation of shark scientists
  5. Sleep can give athletes an edge over competitors − but few recognize how fundamental sleep is to performance
  6. Teens on social media need both protection and privacy – AI could help get the balance right
  7. Eating disorders are the most lethal mental health conditions – reconnecting with internal body sensations can help reduce self-harm
  8. This course examines how conflicts arise over borders
  9. How Black male college athletes deal with anti-Black stereotypes on campus
  10. What Americans can learn from Danish masculinity
  11. The surprising reason why insects circle lights at night: They lose track of the sky
  12. What is an atmospheric river? With California under flood alerts, a hydrologist explains the good and bad of these storms and how they’re changing
  13. What is an atmospheric river? With flooding and mudslides in California, a hydrologist explains the good and bad of these storms and how they’re changing
  14. What is an atmospheric river? A hydrologist explains the good and bad of these flood-prone storms and how they’re changing
  15. What is an atmospheric river? With millions of people under flood alerts, a hydrologist explains the good and bad of these storms and how they’re changing
  16. Dog care below freezing − how to keep your pet warm and safe from cold weather, road salt and more this winter
  17. Telehealth makes timely abortions possible for many, research shows
  18. Backlash to transgender health care isn’t new − but the faulty science used to justify it has changed to meet the times
  19. Why Trump’s control of the Republican Party is bad for democracy
  20. The opening of India’s new Rama temple made waves – but here’s what the central ritual actually meant
  21. Why AI can’t replace air traffic controllers
  22. Longtime NRA chief Wayne LaPierre is leaving the gun group in trouble but still powerful
  23. For 150 years, Black journalists have known what confederate monuments really stood for
  24. Colorado limits plastic bags, Boulder expands fees – but do bans and fines actually reduce waste?
  25. Boulder strengthens rules against plastic bags – but do bans and fines actually reduce waste?
  26. Drone attack on American troops risks widening Middle East conflict – and drawing in Iran-US tensions
  27. El Salvador voters set to trade democracy for promise of security in presidential election
  28. Nonwhite people are drastically underrepresented in local government
  29. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu faces a dilemma: Free the hostages or continue the war in Gaza?
  30. Nonprofit hospitals have an obligation to help their communities, but the people who live nearby may see little benefit
  31. Cybercrime victims who aren’t proficient in English are undercounted – and poorly protected
  32. That sharp, green smell of freshly cut grass? It’s a plant’s cry for help – and it may work as a less toxic pesticide for farmers
  33. Popularly known as ‘gas station heroin,’ tianeptine is being sold as a dietary supplement – with deadly outcomes
  34. What latest polling says about the mood in Ukraine – and the desire to remain optimistic amid the suffering
  35. Who created the alphabet? A historian describes the millennia-long story of the ABCs
  36. When is criticism of Israel antisemitic? A scholar of modern Jewish history explains
  37. Colorado voters seeking to disqualify Trump from the ballot tell Supreme Court Jan. 6 ‘will forever stain’ US history
  38. UN court ruling against Israel shows limits of legal power to prevent genocide − but rapid speed
  39. In the market for a car? Soon you’ll be able to buy a Hyundai on Amazon − and only a Hyundai
  40. Most state abortion bans have limited exceptions − but it’s hard to understand what they mean
  41. France’s biggest Muslim school went from accolades to defunding – showing a key paradox in how the country treats Islam
  42. Our sense of taste helps pace our eating – understanding how may lead to new avenues for weight loss
  43. Treatment can do more harm than good for prostate cancer − why active surveillance may be a better option for some
  44. Why are so many robots white?
  45. What UAW backing means for Biden − and why the union’s endorsement took so long
  46. How to read a Supreme Court case: 10 tips for nonlawyers
  47. Thinking about work as a calling can be meaningful, but there can be unexpected downsides as well
  48. A Western-imposed peace deal in Ukraine risks feeding Russia’s hunger for land – as it did with Serbia
  49. ‘Strife in the courtroom’ − a former federal judge discusses Trump’s second trial for defaming E. Jean Carroll
  50. Could a court really order the destruction of ChatGPT? The New York Times thinks so, and it may be right