Sociology
- phys.org Climate shocks associated with higher rates of intimate partner violence against women
Countries affected by severe climate change may also have a higher prevalence of violence against women, finds a new study led by UCL researchers.
- phys.org Study reveals how humanity could unite to address global challenges
New research led by the University of Oxford has found that perceptions of globally shared life experiences and globally shared biology can strengthen psychological bonding with humanity at large, which can motivate prosocial action on a global scale and help to tackle global problems. The findings ...
- pudding.cool This is a teenager
Watch hundreds of teenagers grow up into adults – and see how their lives turn out
- insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu Organizations Are Complex. Complexity Science Can Help Us Understand Them.
You can’t study the behavior of a flock by looking at individual birds. It’s time to bring that holistic approach to the social sciences, too.
- theconversation.com 17 million South Africans live on communal land – new study of a rural valley offers insights on how to manage it
Satellite images and community perceptions combine to give a fuller picture of land use changes.
- theconversation.com The myth of men’s full-time employment
Think the norm is to join the workforce straight after school, work for five decades and then retire? Think again.
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There are no instances of fatal ecoterrorism – The only fatal terrorist attacks associated with the environmental movement are the Unabomber's activities which were anti-technological
www.cambridge.org Searching for Ecoterrorism: The Crucial Case of the Unabomber | American Political Science Review | Cambridge CoreSearching for Ecoterrorism: The Crucial Case of the Unabomber
- aeon.co The cruelty of crypto in its promise to revive the American dream | Aeon Essays
Selling itself as the new American dream, crypto exposes the vulnerable to fraud and scams, and loads risk onto the poor
- www.psypost.org Extreme metal guitar skills linked to intrasexual competition, but not mating success
New research reveals that guitar skills in extreme metal music are more linked to male competition and status than to attracting mates. The study, focusing on heterosexual male guitarists, suggests that technical proficiency in guitar playing serves more as a display of dominance among peers.
- news.mit.edu How the brain responds to reward is linked to socioeconomic background
The brain’s sensitivity to rewarding experiences — a critical factor in motivation and attention — can be shaped by socioeconomic conditions, according to an MIT study.
- jacobin.com The Reactionary Jargon of Decoloniality
Cloaked in an impenetrable jargon, “decoloniality” dehistoricizes and culturalizes colonialism. It’s a political and intellectual dead end for socialists.
- www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov Sex, aggression, and humour: responses to unicycling
Sam Shuster compares men and women’s responses to the sight of a unicyclist
- news.cnrs.fr Silicon Valley, a sociologist in the tech kingdom
Behind its easy-going, accessible appearance, Silicon Valley is a black box that is difficult to grasp. The sociologist Olivier Alexandre provides some keys for doing so, after spending several years there.
- www.afterbabel.com The Teen Mental Illness Epidemic is International: The Anglosphere
Why did mental health fall off a cliff at the same time and in the same way in the USA, The UK, Canada, Australia, and New Zealand? Part 1 of 3.
- www.nbcnews.com Most people think the U.S. crime rate is rising. They're wrong.
Almost 80 percent of Americans, and 92 percent of Republicans, think crime has gone up. It actually fell in 2023. An expert blames a familiar culprit for the mistaken impression.
- bigthink.com A larger family worsens kids' cognitive development, suggests 30-year study
How does family size and sibling position affect kids' development? A 30-year study turned up some fascinating findings.
- www.nature.com Why hidden xenophobia is surging into the open
Sociologist Mathew Creighton discusses how events in Europe in the past month are fed by people’s covert prejudices.
- www.economist.com One in five young Americans thinks the Holocaust is a myth
Our new poll makes alarming reading
- www.nytimes.com Why Are So Many American Pedestrians Dying at Night?
Nothing resembling this pattern has occurred in other comparably wealthy countries.
- theconversation.com What's lost when we photograph life instead of experiencing it?
Whether it’s through Facebook or Snapchat, images and videos are changing how we communicate. But as words become more trivial, our attention, our creativity, and even our empathy may be at stake.
- theconversation.com Being homeless means not being free − as Americans are supposed to be
To be homeless is a condition in which a person’s freedom is profoundly compromised. And that’s un-American, says a philosopher.
- www.newsweek.com JFK assassination conspiracy viewed completely differently by Gen Z
Younger Americans are far more likely to believe the official account of the Kennedy assassination, a new poll shows.
- www.cnu.org Children, left behind by suburbia, need better community design
Walkable, mixed-use planning is the key to getting young people outside again and enabling their independence.
- www.frontiersin.org Appropriateness ratings of everyday behaviors in the United States now and 50 years ago
IntroductionA crucial aspect of social norms pertains to determining which behaviors are considered appropriate. Here we consider everyday behaviors. Some everyday behaviors are rated as more appropriate than others, and ratings of the appropriateness of a given behavior may vary over time. The obje...
- www.theatlantic.com What the Gig Economy Does to a Human
In an age of precarious labor, not every life amounts to a satisfying story.
- ourworldindata.org Millions of children learn only very little. How can the world provide a better education to the next generation?
Research suggests that many children – especially in the world’s poorest countries – learn only very little in school. What can we do to improve this?