NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Psychological tips aren’t enough – policies need to address structural inequities so everyone can flourish

  • Written by Sarah S. Willen, Associate Professor of Anthropology and Director of the Research Program on Global Health & Human Rights at the Human Rights Institute, University of Connecticut
imageWho gets to flourish and who doesn't?Tony Anderson/DigitalVision via Getty Images

Languishing” is the in-vogue term for today’s widely shared sense of pandemic malaise. According to some psychologists, you can stop languishing with simple steps: Savor the small stuff. Do five good deeds. Find activities that let you “flow.&r...

Read more: Psychological tips aren’t enough – policies need to address structural inequities so everyone can...

More Articles ...

  1. Mismanaged cloud services put user data at risk
  2. Electrifying homes to slow climate change: 4 essential reads
  3. Great white sharks occasionally hunt in pairs - new research sheds light on social behavior of these mysterious predators
  4. Why do cats' eyes glow in the dark?
  5. Water fights, magical decapitated heads and family reunions – the Southeast Asian festival of Songkran has it all
  6. Penance and plague: How the Black Death changed one of Christianity's most important rituals
  7. Will Smith's slap shows 'honor culture' is alive and well
  8. Ukrainian teens' voices from the middle of war: 'You begin to appreciate what was common and boring for you'
  9. Will French presidential election be a case of 'plus ca change, moins ca change?' -- 5 things to watch as nation heads to the poll
  10. To protect wildlife from free-roaming cats, a zone defense may be more effective than trying to get every feline off the street
  11. UN Security Council is powerless to help Ukraine – but it's working as designed to prevent World War III
  12. What is a 529 college savings plan? An economist explains
  13. Fishing, strip clubs and golf: How male-focused networking in medicine blocks female colleagues from top jobs
  14. Your digital footprints are more than a privacy risk – they could help hackers infiltrate computer networks
  15. Pope Francis apologized for the harm done to First Nations peoples, but what does a pope’s apology mean?
  16. Oklahoma state officials resist Supreme Court ruling affirming tribal authority over American Indian country
  17. Ketanji Brown Jackson confirmed as Supreme Court justice: 4 essential reads
  18. Researchers identified over 5,500 new viruses in the ocean, including a missing link in viral evolution
  19. COVID-19: Mental health telemedicine was off to a slow start – then the pandemic happened
  20. 'Is It Cake?' feeds viewers visual catharsis for uncertain times
  21. Bird flu is killing millions of chickens and turkeys across the US
  22. Helping Ukrainians means listening to their needs – 3 lessons for aid groups from Syria's war
  23. The forgotten story of Black soldiers and the Red Ball Express during World War II
  24. How QR codes work and what makes them dangerous – a computer scientist explains
  25. Mental health problems come with an added 'cost' of poorer cognitive function – a neuropsychologist explains
  26. Russia is sparking new nuclear threats – understanding nonproliferation history helps place this in context
  27. Rape by Russian soldiers in Ukraine is the latest example of a despicable wartime crime that spans the globe
  28. Why the best way to stop strongmen like Putin is to prevent their rise in the first place
  29. What is going on in Pakistan? And why has the US been dragged into it?
  30. War in Ukraine is testing some American evangelicals' support for Putin as a leader of conservative values
  31. Shame and secrecy shroud culture of sexual assault in boys' high school sports
  32. How should Dostoevsky and Tolstoy be read during Russia's war against Ukraine?
  33. Repurposing generic drugs can reduce time and cost to develop new treatments – but low profitability remains a barrier
  34. How a poet and professor promotes racial understanding with lessons from history
  35. Paid family leave makes people happier, global data shows
  36. To understand why Biden extended tariffs on solar panels, take a closer look at their historical impact
  37. The cheerful lexicon of the Spanish language may help solve a health mystery called the Hispanic Paradox
  38. What is palliative care? How is it different from hospice?
  39. Ukrainian refugees might not return home, even long after the war eventually ends
  40. 5 ways Americans' lives will change if Congress makes daylight saving time permanent
  41. How Ukraine has defended itself against cyberattacks – lessons for the US
  42. Ketanji Brown Jackson and the color blind society of Martin Luther King Jr.
  43. Har Gobind Khorana: The chemist who cracked DNA's code and made the first artificial gene was born into poverty 100 years ago in an Indian village
  44. Putin is staking his political future on victory in Ukraine – and has little incentive to make peace
  45. Using lies and disinformation, Putin and his team have been building the case for a Ukraine invasion for 14 years
  46. How the 'test to treat' initiative aims to get ahead of the next wave of COVID-19
  47. The 1 in 10 U.S. doctors with reservations about vaccines could be undermining the fight against COVID-19
  48. Planting mixes of flowers around farm fields helps keep bees healthy
  49. People are more likely to react to a Black person's story of injustice – even if it happened to someone who is white
  50. What are war crimes? 3 essential reads on atrocities in Ukraine and the likelihood of prosecuting Putin