Daily Bulletin

Men's Weekly

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Why black women in South Africa don't fully embrace the feminist discourse

  • Written by The Conversation
imageFor black women demands for equal dignity and fairness do not necessarily entail a desire to do away with male leadership in the home, community and country.EPA/Jim Hollander

There are at least two aspects to consider in understanding the reluctance of many black women to fully embrace women’s rights discourse and make violence against women...

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Dishonest academics may make students think plagiarism is acceptable

  • Written by The Conversation
imageIf academics are willing to steal others' ideas and concepts, what's stopping their students from doing the same?Shutterstock

Universities are constantly implementing new measures to stop student plagiarism. Students learn how to correctly cite sources and receive copies of the institution’s academic integrity code. They are helped with their...

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More Articles ...

  1. Why Nigeria took so long to get non-polio endemic status
  2. Why a ban on hunting in Botswana isn't the answer to challenges facing the country
  3. Why we may never understand the reasons people hunt animals as 'trophies'
  4. Healthcare's technology revolution means a boost for jobs in IT
  5. US election descends into a circus with first Republican debate
  6. Technolog: Forget fixed broadband: Large phones and 4G drive UK over mobile tipping point
  7. No snow, no worries? China gears up for its first serious Olympics
  8. Grattan on Friday: Entitlements issue turns into cluster bomb
  9. White Australia needs to take responsibility for reconciliation too
  10. Space mining is closer than you think, and the prospects are great
  11. Nepal earthquake may have 'unzipped' fault line, boosting risk of future quake
  12. Racism defies logic – so don't go searching for any
  13. Coal isn't good for humanity, but renewables aren't the only answer to energy poverty
  14. Lie-bore: powerful bank regulators running out of excuses
  15. Don't worry, if you smoked during pregnancy, your child isn't programmed for delinquency
  16. The heat in northern Australian classrooms could impede learning
  17. How American journalists covered the first use of the atomic bomb
  18. Statistics professors give Fox News a B- on their big polling test
  19. Delta cities, wealthy or not, face rising risk from sinking land
  20. Lessons from Charles Dickens for the new Premier League season
  21. Cutting emissions through biofuels will lead to water shortages – study
  22. Offensive marketing can work – but not if it vilifies women
  23. Researchers would make smarter cuts than management accountants
  24. #ILookLikeAnEngineer shines a welcome light on industry's diversity
  25. Over 21 years the Oppikoppi music festival has come to embrace South Africa's diversity
  26. Hiroshima: stifled stories and one man's memory of a cataclysm
  27. How Libya became the International Criminal Court's latest failure
  28. So, who was Ted Heath?
  29. It's not Earth 2.0, but our new rocky neighbour is a planet worth watching
  30. What do zombies, pandemics and the price of eggs have in common?
  31. As Hiroshima's legacy fades, Japan's postwar pacifism is fraying
  32. The deep influence of the A-bomb on anime and manga
  33. Even before Hiroshima, people knew the atomic bomb
  34. If a female president is good for the Ivy League, why not for the rest of us?
  35. How colour-coding your fridge can stop your greens going to waste
  36. How we won the world robot soccer championship
  37. Wasps turn spiders into their zombie bodyguards, then kill them
  38. Hiroshima's literary legacy: the 'blinding flash' that changed the world forever
  39. Should British universities worry about a lack of Nobel Prizes in the 21st century?
  40. Elite training in hot conditions for competition in cooler climates – a hot topic?
  41. No country for dirty money: behind Britain's populist promise on corruption
  42. Death penalty: execution ballads were the news reports and tweets of a bloody era
  43. Researchers are looking to a surprisingly old idea for the next generation of ships: wind power
  44. My Life Directed By Nicolas Winding Refn offers strained insight into the Danish director
  45. What's normal, anyway? GPs should discourage women from unnecessary genital surgery
  46. Should Shakespeare be taught in Africa’s classrooms?
  47. Explainer: the problem drug patents pose for developing countries
  48. 'Blood lions' sheds a harsh light on the canned hunting industry
  49. A carbon tax for South Africa: why a pragmatic approach makes sense
  50. Why Africa offers growing opportunities for agricultural products

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