NewsPronto

 
Men's Weekly

.

USA Conversation

The Conversation USA

The Conversation USA

Por qué la blasfemia es un delito capital en algunos países musulmanes

  • Written by Ahmet T. Kuru, Porteous Professor of Political Science, San Diego State University
imageLos miembros de un grupo de la sociedad civil participan en una vigilia con velas para rendir homenaje al ciudadano de Sri Lanka Priyantha Kumara, que fue linchado por una turba musulmana en Pakistán.AP Photo/K.M. Chaudary

Un hombre de Sri Lanka trabajando en Pakistán, Priyantha Kumara, fue linchado por una turba el 3 de diciembre,...

Read more: Por qué la blasfemia es un delito capital en algunos países musulmanes

More Articles ...

  1. Where are memories stored in the brain? New research suggests they may be in the connections between your brain cells
  2. 2021’s biggest climate and weather disasters cost the U.S. $145 billion – here's what climate science says about them in 5 essential reads
  3. Watch for these conflicts over education in 2022
  4. What is 5G? An electrical engineer explains
  5. End-of-life conversations can be hard, but your loved ones will thank you
  6. How the Earth's tilt creates short, cold January days
  7. How much candy do Americans eat in a whole year?
  8. Supreme Court considers derailing federal vaccine mandates – appears inclined to keep for health workers, but not wider workforce
  9. Sidney Poitier -- Hollywood's first Black leading man reflected the civil rights movement on screen
  10. Ahmaud Arbery murderers sentenced to life in prison: 4 essential reads on the case
  11. In Kazakhstan, Russia follows a playbook it developed in Ukraine
  12. Lurking behind lackluster jobs gain are a stagnating labor market and the threat of omicron
  13. From delta to omicron, here's how scientists know which coronavirus variants are circulating in the US
  14. Why kids shouldn't eat added sugar before they turn 2, according to a nutritional epidemiologist
  15. Regret can be all-consuming – a neurobehavioral scientist explains how people can overcome it
  16. The metaverse offers a future full of potential – for terrorists and extremists, too
  17. Women are finding new ways to influence male-led faiths
  18. School closure debates put teachers unions front and center
  19. Biden urges America to see the truth of Jan. 6 – and understand its place in history
  20. How democracy gets eroded – lessons from a Nixon expert
  21. Can a Christian flag fly at city hall? The Supreme Court will have to decide
  22. The 'China shock' of trade in the 2000s reverberates in US politics and economics – and warns of the dangers for fossil fuel workers
  23. College students with young kids – especially mothers – find themselves in a time crunch
  24. Real shooting stars exist, but they aren't the streaks you see in a clear night sky
  25. When endangered species recover, humans may need to make room for them – and it's not always easy
  26. A taste for sweet – an anthropologist explains the evolutionary origins of why you're programmed to love sugar
  27. Online tools put will-writing in reach for most people – but they're not the end of the line for producing a legally binding document
  28. After Afghanistan, US military presence abroad faces domestic and foreign opposition in 2022
  29. 'Don’t Look Up': Hollywood's primer on climate denial illustrates 5 myths that fuel rejection of science
  30. How cybercriminals turn paper checks stolen from mailboxes into bitcoin
  31. When researchers don't have the proteins they need, they can get AI to 'hallucinate' new structures
  32. What's the difference between sugar, other natural sweeteners and artificial sweeteners? A food chemist explains sweet science
  33. The promise of repairing bones and tendons with human-made materials
  34. Why does experiencing 'flow' feel so good? A communication scientist explains
  35. What is pay-as-you-throw? A waste expert explains
  36. Future engineers need to understand their work's human impact – here's how my classes prepare students to tackle problems like climate change
  37. Zoos and aquariums shift to a new standard of 'animal welfare' that depends on deeper understanding of animals' lives
  38. 'Dataraising' – when you're asked to chip in with data instead of money
  39. How changing parental beliefs can build stronger vocabulary and math skills for young children
  40. American support for conspiracy theories and armed rebellion isn't new – we just didn't believe it before the Capitol insurrection
  41. The 'sore loser effect': Rejecting election results can destabilize democracy and drive terrorism
  42. Not all polarization is bad, but the US could be in trouble
  43. Why can’t we throw all our trash into a volcano and burn it up?
  44. Rifts between older mothers and their adult children usually endure – even through divorce, illness and death
  45. Philanthropists seeking to fix big problems must tread carefully – here's how they can make their efforts more compatible with democracy
  46. Inflation, workforce participation and real wages: 3 key indicators for monitoring the economy in 2022
  47. Ghislaine Maxwell guilty in Epstein sex trafficking trial: What the case revealed about female sex offenders
  48. E.O. Wilson's lifelong passion for ants helped him teach humans about how to live sustainably with nature
  49. 4 New Year's resolutions for a healthier environment in 2022
  50. Not all calories are equal – a dietitian explains the different ways the kinds of foods you eat matter to your body