NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

For many immigrant families, the fight for reunification is just beginning

  • Written by Marcia Zug, Professor of Family Law, University of South Carolina

President Donald Trump signed an executive order June 20 purporting to end immigrant family separations at U.S. border with Mexico. Four days later, the departments of Homeland Security and Health and Human Services announced a plan to reunite approximately 2,000 children who were taken from their parents at the border between April and the time...

Read more: For many immigrant families, the fight for reunification is just beginning

Searching for diversity in Silicon Valley tech firms – and finding some

  • Written by Donald T. Tomaskovic-Devey, Professor of Sociology; Director, Center for Employment Equity, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Many voices mean many viewpoints.nito/Shutterstock.com

Silicon Valley technology firms have had serious problems with demographic diversity, including accusations of hostile climates toward women and minority employees. A new analysis of company-level employment data I helped conduct finds, however, that some firms seem to have figured out how to...

Read more: Searching for diversity in Silicon Valley tech firms – and finding some

The latest blood pressure guidelines: What they mean for you

  • Written by John Warner, Executive Vice President, Health Affairs, UT Southwestern Medical Center
An accurate reading is essential to detect high blood pressure. This photo shows optimal procedures, including the supported arm, no clothing on the arm and uncrossed legs.The American Heart Association., CC BY-SA

Updated blood pressure guidelines from the American Heart Association mean that many more Americans, notably older people, are now...

Read more: The latest blood pressure guidelines: What they mean for you

The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is in trouble – but the ground beneath it may buy some time

  • Written by Richard Aster, Professor of Geophysics and Department Head, Colorado State University
As the West Antarctic Ice Sheet melts, the land beneath rebounds – at a faster rate than thought. NASA, CC BY-NC-ND

Working in West Antarctica is profoundly humbling. We scientists work from tiny field camps incongruously airdropped onto a vast plain of kilometers-thick glacial ice extending from horizon to horizon. It is initially difficult...

Read more: The West Antarctic Ice Sheet is in trouble – but the ground beneath it may buy some time

School safety commission should not worry about violence in entertainment media

  • Written by Christopher J. Ferguson, Professor of Psychology, Stetson University
Strong link lacking between violence in entertainment and violence in society. Mike Focus/www.shutterstock.com

On June 21, I testified before Education Secretary Betsy Devos’s school safety commission on the impact that violence in entertainment media has on violence in society.

I’m a psychologist who has studied violent media for 15...

Read more: School safety commission should not worry about violence in entertainment media

Social impact bonds, explained

  • Written by Sheela Pandey, Assistant Professor of Management, School of Business Administration, Harrisburg campus, Pennsylvania State University
Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin, front, after she signed a law that allows pay-for-success funding for projects aiming to reduce female incarceration rates.AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki

A new approach to fighting poverty and solving some of society’s other big problems is emerging at a time when the federal government and states are cutting back on...

Read more: Social impact bonds, explained

How colleges must collaborate to lift up the communities just outside their door

  • Written by Nancy Cantor, Chancellor, Rutgers University Newark
Contrasting cityscapes, similar challenges from www.shutterstock.com

From the editors: Universities teach and research, but what impact do they – and should they – have on their local communities?

We asked the leaders of Rutgers University - Newark and West Virginia University to explain their take on this issue given the considerable...

Read more: How colleges must collaborate to lift up the communities just outside their door

Helping plants remove natural toxins could boost crop yields by 47 percent

  • Written by Paul South, Postdoctoral Researcher at the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Genetically engineered tobacco plants growing in a greenhouse.Paul South, CC BY-ND

Can you imagine the entire population of the United States, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, the United Kingdom and France going hungry?

You don’t need to imagine. That is exactly what happens every day when an estimated 815 million people around the globe go hungry....

Read more: Helping plants remove natural toxins could boost crop yields by 47 percent

How Catholic women fought against Vatican's prohibition on contraceptives

  • Written by Mary J. Henold, John R. Turbyfill Professor of History, Roanoke College
People dressed as sperm cells at Papal Nuncio building in The Hague for the sixth birthday of the encyclical, 'Humanae Vitae.'Nationaal Archief

Fifty years ago a fierce debate erupted in the Catholic Church over the papal document “Humanae Vitae,” which reiterated the church’s ban on artificial contraception. Six hundred...

Read more: How Catholic women fought against Vatican's prohibition on contraceptives

More Articles ...

  1. Why care about undocumented immigrants? For one thing, they've become vital to key sectors of the US economy
  2. Trump's new plan to consolidate federal food safety efforts won't work. Here's why
  3. Nationalism and piety dominate Turkey's election
  4. Las bebidas light pueden perjudicar tu dieta
  5. El bombardeo de noticias falsas distorsiona la realidad en Venezuela
  6. Physical therapy could lower need for opioids, but lack of money and time are hurdles
  7. The Bezos-Buffett-Dimon health care venture: Eliminate the middlemen
  8. China cannot spend its way to soccer greatness
  9. Preventing crimes against humanity in the US
  10. The 3 stages of giving: Deference, arrogance and inquiry
  11. Making art 'should be uncomfortable' – a conversation with visual artist Lorna Simpson
  12. It's time for a new approach to travel
  13. A sudden and lasting separation from a parent can permanently alter brain development
  14. Corporate CEOs' political voice growing louder as they criticize Trump policies like separating migrant children
  15. Why our brains see the world as 'us' versus 'them'
  16. Sitting and diabetes in older adults: Does timing matter?
  17. What the US can learn from other countries in dealing with pain and the opioid crisis
  18. How the Trump Foundation could undercut the public trust in charitable giving
  19. After volcano eruption, Guatemalans lead their own disaster recovery
  20. How refugee children make American education stronger
  21. Opioids don't have to be addictive – the new versions will treat pain without triggering pleasure
  22. Breaking up families? America looks like a Dickens novel
  23. In retirement, most ex-presidents can't resist the urge to stay relevant
  24. Misinformation and biases infect social media, both intentionally and accidentally
  25. 9 essential reads on the Supreme Court and gerrymandering
  26. Why turning homelessness into a crime is cruel and costly
  27. A way around opioids: Target the type of pain for better pain relief
  28. Extreme stress during childhood can hurt social learning for years to come
  29. Trump and Sessions can end immigrant family separations without Congress' help
  30. Forced migration from Central America: 5 essential reads
  31. Yoga isn't timeless: it's changing to meet contemporary needs
  32. How setting a schedule can make you less productive
  33. How to heal African-Americans' traumatic history
  34. Juneteenth: Freedom's promise is still denied to thousands of blacks unable to make bail
  35. The public health benefits of adding offshore wind to the grid
  36. 30 years ago global warming became front-page news – and both Republicans and Democrats took it seriously
  37. More mental health care alone will not stop gun violence
  38. What it means to be a Christian in America today
  39. Schools must equip students to navigate alt-right websites that push fake news
  40. Opiate addiction and the history of pain and race in the US
  41. Colombia elects a conservative who promises to 'correct' its peace accord
  42. Nicaraguans try to topple a dictator — again
  43. The Bible's message on separating immigrant children from parents is a lot different from what Jeff Sessions thinks
  44. Astronaut Sally K. Ride's legacy – encouraging young women to embrace science and engineering
  45. What 40 years of 'Space Invaders' says about the 1970s – and today
  46. Why a minor change to how EPA makes rules could radically reduce environmental protection
  47. Drug shortages pose a public health crisis in the US
  48. Why you should eat popcorn with chopsticks – and other psychological tricks to make life more enjoyable
  49. As Venezuela's public health system collapses, mosquito-borne viruses re-emerge
  50. What is the summer solstice? An astronomer explains