NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

The Conversation

Why the future of the world's largest religion is female – and African

  • Written by Gina Zurlo, Co-Director of the Center for the Study of Global Christianity, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary
imageNigerian women greet each other at St. Charles Catholic Church in Ngurore, Nigeria, on Feb. 17, 2019. AP Photo/Sunday Alamba

At the start of 2019, Bill and Melinda Gates released a list of facts that had surprised them the previous year. Number four on their list: “Data can be sexist.”

“There are huge gaps in the global data about...

Read more: Why the future of the world's largest religion is female – and African

An emphasis on brilliance creates a toxic, dog-eat-dog workplace atmosphere that discourages women

  • Written by Andrea Vial, Assistant Professor of Psychology, New York University Abu Dhabi
imageZero-sum competitive environments that set up winners and losers may be less appealing to women.Photo and Co/The Image Bank via Getty Images

The Research Brief is a short take about interesting academic work.

The big idea

Workplaces that emphasize brilliance are perceived to have a masculine work culture that undermines gender diversity, according to...

Read more: An emphasis on brilliance creates a toxic, dog-eat-dog workplace atmosphere that discourages women

Ketanji Brown Jackson’s path to Supreme Court nomination was paved by trailblazing Black women judges

  • Written by Sharon D. Wright Austin, Professor of Political Science, University of Florida
imageJudge Ketanji Brown Jackson speaks at her Senate confirmation hearing.AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Just five women and two African Americans, both men, are among the 115 people who have served on the United States’ highest court over more than two centuries. Both of those numbers may change in 2022, with President Joe Biden’s nomination of...

Read more: Ketanji Brown Jackson’s path to Supreme Court nomination was paved by trailblazing Black women...

Biden's plain speaking on Ukraine inspires support without sparking a wider war – an echo of the Truman Doctrine, 75 years ago

  • Written by Denise M. Bostdorff, Professor and Chair of Communication Studies, The College of Wooster
imageU.K. politician Winston Churchill with U.S. President Harry Truman on March 3, 1946, leaving for Missouri, where Churchill would make a speech warning about the dangers of the Iron Curtain. Hulton-Deutsch Collection/CORBIS/Corbis via Getty Images

President Joe Biden faces an aggressive Russia waging war to expand its borders. He has rallied...

Read more: Biden's plain speaking on Ukraine inspires support without sparking a wider war – an echo of the...

Colleges routinely fail to ask about new hires' history of sexual harassment

  • Written by Susan Fortney, University Professor and Professor of Law, Texas A&M University
imageSexual harassment affects almost one out of every two college students. Evelyn Hockstein/For The Washington Post via Getty Images

When three graduate students sued Harvard University in early 2022 for sexual harassment by a tenured professor, they claimed the school hired the professor despite knowing that he allegedly harassed students at the...

Read more: Colleges routinely fail to ask about new hires' history of sexual harassment

Food pantries that give away stuff people can't or won't cook have an 'acorn squash problem'

  • Written by Diana Cuy Castellanos, Assistant Professor of Dietetics and Nutrition, University of Dayton
imageNot everyone's up for converting this vegetable into a side or main dish.duckycards/E+ via Getty Images

A major problem with how food donation currently works in the United States is that a lot of the calories in those boxes and bags come from items that aren’t particularly healthy, such as packaged snacks.

This arrangement is troubling in...

Read more: Food pantries that give away stuff people can't or won't cook have an 'acorn squash problem'

Putin's control over Ukraine war news is not total - it's challenged by online news and risk-taking journalists

  • Written by Sarah Oates, Professor and Senior Scholar, Philip Merrill College of Journalism, University of Maryland
imageA woman looks at a computer screen as Russian state news editor Marina Ovsyannikova protests the Ukraine war during a news segment.AFP via Getty Images

The Russian media is a powerful propaganda machine. Russian media outlets have been closely controlled by the government over the past several decades, and since Russia invaded Ukraine on Feb. 24,...

Read more: Putin's control over Ukraine war news is not total - it's challenged by online news and...

In ‘Licorice Pizza’ a 15-year-old and 25-year-old fall for each other – here's what's known about these types of relationships

  • Written by Jeni Loftus, Associate Professor of Sociology, University of Memphis

Nominated for Academy Awards for best picture, best director and best original screenplay, “Licorice Pizza” is also garnering attention – and raising eyebrows – for the relationship at the center of the film.

Set in 1970s California, it tells the story of 15-year-old Gary, who falls for a 25-year-old woman named Alana. As...

Read more: In ‘Licorice Pizza’ a 15-year-old and 25-year-old fall for each other – here's what's known about...

El olor de la enfermedad: El uso de perros, ratones y hurones para detectar padecimientos

  • Written by Glen J. Golden, Research Scientist/Scholar I, Colorado State University
imageEl sentido del olfato de un perro es al menos 1.000 veces más sensible que cualquier dispositivo mecánico. Le están entrenando a Moose, un perro de Nebrasks, para detectar ciertas aromas.Bill Cotton/Colorado State University, CC BY-ND

Nota del editor: Debido a un brote de la gripe aviar en los Estados Unidos que comenzó...

Read more: El olor de la enfermedad: El uso de perros, ratones y hurones para detectar padecimientos

Economic sanctions may make Russians' lives worse – without stopping Putin's assault on Ukraine

  • Written by Joseph Wright, Professor of Political Science, Penn State
imageEveryday Russians, like these people in Moscow, may shoulder much of the burden of the world's economic sanctions aimed at Vladimir Putin and his oligarchs.AFP via Getty Images

The economic sanctions levied upon Russia as a consequence of its invasion of Ukraine target the Russian economy and Russian President Vladimir Putin’s closest...

Read more: Economic sanctions may make Russians' lives worse – without stopping Putin's assault on Ukraine

More Articles ...

  1. What is the new COVID-19 variant BA.2, and will it cause another wave of infections in the US?
  2. SEC proposes far-reaching climate disclosure rules for companies – here’s where the rules may be vulnerable to legal challenges
  3. Defending Europe: How cultural identity shapes support for Ukraine and armed resistance against Russia
  4. An expert on trends in gun sales and gun violence in pandemic America
  5. The 'hot hand' is a real basketball phenomenon – but only some players have the ability to go on these basket-making streaks
  6. Older Americans are given the wrong idea about online safety – here's how to help them help themselves
  7. ‘I wanted a professor like me’ – a hip-hop artist explains his turn to academia
  8. Kyiv's Jews, persecuted under Polish-Lithuanian, Russian, Nazi and Soviet regimes, now face the onslaught of Putin's forces
  9. Abortion pills are just as safe to prescribe based on a patient's medical history as after an in-person exam, new research finds
  10. Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson faces confirmation hearings: 7 questions answered
  11. How a few geothermal plants could solve America's lithium supply crunch and boost the EV battery industry
  12. Why is Russia's church backing Putin's war? Church-state history gives a clue
  13. Maps show – and hide – key information about Ukraine war
  14. 6 wildfire terms to understand, from red flag warning to 100% containment
  15. Fewer Americans are hunting, and that raises hard questions about funding conservation through gun sales
  16. Ukraine's women fighters reflect a cultural tradition of feminist independence
  17. Why weren't women allowed to act in Shakespeare's plays?
  18. Ukraine's economy went from Soviet chaos to oligarch domination to vital global trader of wheat and neon – and now Russian devastation
  19. Russia's energy clout doesn't just come from oil and gas – it's also a key nuclear supplier
  20. Some states are making it harder to vote, some are making it easier – but it's too soon to say if this will affect voter turnout in 2022
  21. Why pregnant people should get vaccinated for COVID-19 – a maternal care expert explains
  22. The West thinks that Russians, suffering from sanctions, will end up abandoning Putin – but history indicates they won't
  23. Calling Asians 'robotic' is a racist stereotype with a long, troubled history
  24. Who are the Jesuits?
  25. A large solar storm could knock out the power grid and the internet – an electrical engineer explains how
  26. How prosthetic penises in shows like HBO's 'Minx' reinforce existing stereotypes and taboos
  27. How poetry can help people get through hard times – 4 essential reads
  28. Lasso-ing Chelsea FC? Why super-rich US sports owners are looking to buy a London soccer team
  29. Ukraine's foreign fighters have little in common with those who signed up to fight in the Spanish Civil War
  30. Ukraine is benefiting from generous donations – and many other global causes need help, too
  31. Russia’s no longer a ‘most-favored nation’: 5 questions about the coveted trading status answered
  32. Why Crimean Tatars are fearful as Russia invades Ukraine
  33. How does the immune system mobilize in response to a COVID-19 infection or a vaccine? 5 essential reads
  34. From healthy births to sustainable management, 5 essential reads on the fascinating and complex vagina
  35. AI maps psychedelic 'trip' experiences to regions of the brain – opening new route to psychiatric treatments
  36. 'I have a need': How Zelenskyy's plea to Congress emphasized shared identity with US
  37. How AI helped deliver cash aid to many of the poorest people in Togo
  38. How weapons get to Ukraine and what's needed to protect vulnerable supply chains
  39. Kyiv has faced adversity before – and a stronger Ukrainian identity grew in response
  40. Ukraine wants a no-fly zone. What does this mean, and would one make any sense in this war?
  41. Cloud seeding might not be as promising as drought-troubled states hope
  42. Why the Fed can't stop prices from going up anytime soon – but may have more luck over the long term
  43. El metaverso es dinero y las criptos reinan: por qué estarás en blockchain cuando saltes al mundo virtual
  44. Pollen season is getting longer and more intense with climate change – here's what allergy sufferers can expect in the future
  45. Small oil producers like Ghana, Guyana and Suriname could gain as buyers shun Russian crude
  46. The Ebola virus can 'hide out' in the brain after treatment and cause recurrent infections
  47. Plantations could be used to teach about US slavery if stories are told truthfully
  48. What teens see in closed online spaces like the Discord app
  49. The first bat mitzvah was 100 years ago, and has been opening doors for Jewish women ever since
  50. For dogs with arthritis, daily activities don't have to be painful