NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Making art 'should be uncomfortable' – a conversation with visual artist Lorna Simpson

  • Written by Christina Sharpe, Professor of English, Tufts University
Visual artist Lorna Simpson speaks at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts Medal Gala in May 2018.Paul Rutherford/Tufts University, CC BY

Lorna Simpson, a pioneering visual and conceptual artist whose striking work on race, gender and identity has placed her among the leading artists of her generation, was recently honored by the School...

Read more: Making art 'should be uncomfortable' – a conversation with visual artist Lorna Simpson

It's time for a new approach to travel

  • Written by Randy Malamud, Regents' Professor of English, Georgia State University
As Mark Twain once said, 'Travel is fatal to prejudice, bigotry, and narrow-mindedness.'Jake Simonds-Malamud, CC BY-SA

When I overcame a flying phobia, I resolved to make up for lost time by visiting as much of the world as I could.

So in the course of a decade, I logged over 300,000 miles, flying everywhere from Buenos Aires to Dubai.

I knew...

Read more: It's time for a new approach to travel

A sudden and lasting separation from a parent can permanently alter brain development

  • Written by Jacek Debiec, Assistant Professor / Department of Psychiatry; Assistant Research Professor / Molecular & Behavioral Neuroscience Institute, University of Michigan
A boy stares out of a heavily tinted bus window leaving a U.S. Customs and Border Protection facility, Tuesday, June 19, 2018, in McAllen, Texas. AP Photo/Eric Gay

At birth, the brain is the most underdeveloped organ in our body. It takes up until our mid-20s for our brains to fully mature. Any serious and prolonged adversity, such as a sudden,...

Read more: A sudden and lasting separation from a parent can permanently alter brain development

Corporate CEOs' political voice growing louder as they criticize Trump policies like separating migrant children

  • Written by Jerry Davis, Professor of Management and Sociology, Ross School of Business, University of Michigan
Children wait at a private charity after being released by Customs and Border Protection.AP Photo/Eric Gay

America’s CEOs have become increasingly active on political issues that they would have shunned in prior years.

The latest example came in response to the Trump administration’s “zero tolerance” border enforcement policy...

Read more: Corporate CEOs' political voice growing louder as they criticize Trump policies like separating...

Why our brains see the world as 'us' versus 'them'

  • Written by Leslie Henderson, Professor of Physiology and Neurobiology, Dean of Faculty Affairs, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College
What are your in-groups and out-groups?ksenia_bravo/Shutterstock.com

Anti-immigrant policies, race-related demonstrations, Title IX disputes, affirmative action court cases, same-sex marriage litigation.

These issues are continually in the headlines. But even thoughtful articles on these subjects seem always to devolve to pitting warring factions...

Read more: Why our brains see the world as 'us' versus 'them'

Sitting and diabetes in older adults: Does timing matter?

  • Written by John Bellettiere, Postdoctoral Research Fellow, University of California San Diego
Sitting can do more than give you a headache. It is linked to diabetes and obesity. Stockfour/Shutterstock.com

Adults are sitting more than ever, and few pay attention to how they sit throughout the day.

Take a moment to think about all the reasons we sit. First off, you’re probably sitting while reading this. Some of the most common sitting...

Read more: Sitting and diabetes in older adults: Does timing matter?

What the US can learn from other countries in dealing with pain and the opioid crisis

  • Written by Marcia G. Ory, Regents and Distinguished Professor, Associate Vice President for Strategic Partnerships and Initiatives, Texas A&M University
The U.S. has the highest daily opioid use rate in the world.Kimberly Boyles/shutterstock

With all the recent news on opioid overuse in the U.S., it’s not surprising that Americans consume the vast majority of the global opioid supply. Daily opioid use in the U.S. is the highest in the world, with an estimated one daily dose prescribed for...

Read more: What the US can learn from other countries in dealing with pain and the opioid crisis

How the Trump Foundation could undercut the public trust in charitable giving

  • Written by Cassandra Burke Robertson, Professor of Law and Director of the Center for Professional Ethics, Case Western Reserve University
Donald Trump gave this $100,000 check from his foundation to a charity during an Iowa campaign event in 2016.AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

When New York State Attorney General Barbara Underwood recently sued the Donald J. Trump Foundation and four Trump family members who serve on its board of directors, she alleged the foundation was “little...

Read more: How the Trump Foundation could undercut the public trust in charitable giving

After volcano eruption, Guatemalans lead their own disaster recovery

  • Written by Walter E. Little, Professor of Anthropology, University at Albany, State University of New York
Ivan Rodriguez and Juan Ortiz are still searching for relatives who disappeared in San Miguel Los Lotes during Guatemala's June 3 Fuego volcano eruption. The government's rescue mission has now ended.AP Photo/Rodrigo Abd

The Fuego volcano puffs smoke against a clear blue sky, as it has done for centuries.

Here in Antigua, 10 miles away, people go...

Read more: After volcano eruption, Guatemalans lead their own disaster recovery

How refugee children make American education stronger

  • Written by Shawna Shapiro, Associate Professor of Writing and Linguistics; Director of Writing & Rhetoric Program, Middlebury College
Schools are seeing declines in refugee children under the Trump administration.Jan Andersen/www.shutterstock.com

In recent years, there has been a great deal of public angst about refugee resettlement in the U.S. and Europe. Americans are deeply divided on the issue. For instance, a Pew Research Center study published in May of this year found that...

Read more: How refugee children make American education stronger

More Articles ...

  1. Opioids don't have to be addictive – the new versions will treat pain without triggering pleasure
  2. Breaking up families? America looks like a Dickens novel
  3. In retirement, most ex-presidents can't resist the urge to stay relevant
  4. Misinformation and biases infect social media, both intentionally and accidentally
  5. 9 essential reads on the Supreme Court and gerrymandering
  6. Why turning homelessness into a crime is cruel and costly
  7. A way around opioids: Target the type of pain for better pain relief
  8. Extreme stress during childhood can hurt social learning for years to come
  9. Trump and Sessions can end immigrant family separations without Congress' help
  10. Forced migration from Central America: 5 essential reads
  11. Yoga isn't timeless: it's changing to meet contemporary needs
  12. How setting a schedule can make you less productive
  13. How to heal African-Americans' traumatic history
  14. Juneteenth: Freedom's promise is still denied to thousands of blacks unable to make bail
  15. The public health benefits of adding offshore wind to the grid
  16. 30 years ago global warming became front-page news – and both Republicans and Democrats took it seriously
  17. More mental health care alone will not stop gun violence
  18. What it means to be a Christian in America today
  19. Schools must equip students to navigate alt-right websites that push fake news
  20. Opiate addiction and the history of pain and race in the US
  21. Colombia elects a conservative who promises to 'correct' its peace accord
  22. Nicaraguans try to topple a dictator — again
  23. The Bible's message on separating immigrant children from parents is a lot different from what Jeff Sessions thinks
  24. Astronaut Sally K. Ride's legacy – encouraging young women to embrace science and engineering
  25. What 40 years of 'Space Invaders' says about the 1970s – and today
  26. Why a minor change to how EPA makes rules could radically reduce environmental protection
  27. Drug shortages pose a public health crisis in the US
  28. Why you should eat popcorn with chopsticks – and other psychological tricks to make life more enjoyable
  29. As Venezuela's public health system collapses, mosquito-borne viruses re-emerge
  30. What is the summer solstice? An astronomer explains
  31. US communities can suffer long-term consequences after immigration raids
  32. Yemen: Understanding the conflict
  33. One likely winner of the World Cup? Putin
  34. Why New York state is suing the Trumps: 5 questions answered
  35. How can a baby have 3 parents?
  36. Puerto Ricans don't trust official information on Hurricane Maria
  37. Why domestic abuse and anti-gay violence qualify as persecution in asylum law
  38. How Native American food is tied to important sacred stories
  39. How recycling more steel and aluminum could slash imports without a trade war
  40. A Father's Day reminder from science: Your kids aren't really growing up quickly
  41. Mexico seeks to become 'country of refuge' as US cracks down on migrants
  42. El nuevo aeropuerto de la Ciudad de México es un desastre ambiental que podría ser un gran parque natural
  43. To avoid humans, more wildlife now work the night shift
  44. Fathers forgotten when it comes to services to help them be good parents, new study finds
  45. Why black women's experiences of #MeToo are different
  46. Suicide nation: What's behind the need to numb and to seek a final escape?
  47. Lessons on political polarization from Lincoln's 'House Divided' speech, 160 years later
  48. Four campus free speech problems solved
  49. Digital mental health drug raises troubling questions
  50. New European rules may give US internet users true privacy choices for the first time