By Anna Raymaker, Ph.D. Candidate in Electrical and Computer Engineering, Georgia Institute of Technology
In addition to watching out for missile and drone attacks, mariners in conflict zones need to be on guard for GPS spoofing and other cyberattacks. The stakes are high and mariners are ill-prepared.
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By Emmalee Ford, Adjunct Lecturer, Sexual and Reproductive Health, University of Sydney Tessa Copp, NHMRC Emerging Leader Research Fellow in Reproductive Health, School of Public Health, University of Sydney
Have you ever heard two or more women say they’re on the same cycle? This is a common claim among women who live together, for example in a family or as housemates. This idea that people menstruate, or have their period, at the same time is known as “menstrual synchrony”. If their menstrual periods happen to regularly align, they might describe themselves as being “in sync”. But is menstrual synchrony possible, according to science? Let’s unpack the evidence.
The ‘menstrual synchrony’ myth The term “menstrual synchrony” is difficult…
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By Danaë Anderson, Lecturer in Occupational Health and Safety, Te Herenga Waka — Victoria University of Wellington Jeremy Morrow, Senior Lecturer, Business School, Auckland University of Technology
One survey showed employees are 57% less likely than leaders to believe performance management is working well. But there are better ways.
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By Forus
What connects a pad box in a Nigerian school, a coalition meeting in Pakistan, and a digital security workshop in Paraguay? They each address a structural barrier that limits women’s participation.
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By Human Rights Watch
Click to expand Image A woman exits the Constitutional Court building, in Quito, Ecuador, February 7, 2024. © 2024 Dolores Ochoa/AP Photo (Washington, DC, March 12, 2026) – Ecuador’s Constitutional Court’s ruling, made public on March 10, 2026, that people under 18 cannot automatically be refused a request to modify their gender on identity documents is an important victory for the rights of transgender youth, Human Rights Watch said today. The ruling affirms that constitutional protection cannot rest on rigid assumptions about age while ignoring adolescents’ lived realities, evolving…
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By Human Rights Watch
Click to expand Image Rescue forces and others at work following a strike on a primary school in Minab, Iran, February 28, 2026. © 2026 Abbas Zakeri/Mehr News/WANA (West Asia News Agency) via Reuters (Washington, DC) – Reported findings that the United States is responsible for the recent deadly school attack in Iran, and that it was based on outdated targeting data, highlight the need for reform and accountability within the US military to minimize civilian harm during conflict, Human Rights Watch said today.The New York Times reported on March 11 that an ongoing US military…
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By Tara McGee, Professor, Earth & Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta Amy Cardinal Christianson, Senior Fire Advisor, Indigenous leadership Initiative
Wildfires disproportionately impact Indigenous communities. Over the last four decades, 42 per cent of wildfire evacuations across Canada have been of Indigenous communities.
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By Annabel Hoare, PhD Candidate in Gender-Based Political Violence, Anglia Ruskin University
The recent Netflix hit series Adolescence crystallised growing public concern about the proliferation of male supremacist beliefs targeted at young men. So Inside the Manosphere, Louis Theroux’s new documentary for the same platform, arrives at a critical moment in the masculinity debate. Inside the Manosphere sets out to explore a group of prominent “manfluencers” who promise young men status, wealth and sexual success through a worldview shaped by misogynistic and male-supremacist beliefs about gender and power. By crafting a stylised storyline that focuses on the few…
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By Eric Lob, Associate Professor of Politics and International Relations, Florida International University
Iran’s new ruler is already a marked man. U.S. President Donald Trump has said Mojtaba Khamenei, who replaced his slain father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, as the country’s supreme leader, is an unacceptable choice and threatened…
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By Keiran Hardy, Associate Professor, Griffith Criminology Institute, Griffith University Rebecca Wickes, Professor of Criminology, Griffith University
Can we really create more cohesive societies by banning everything we deem to be not cohesive? It can be part of the approach, but there’s more work to do.
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