American business magnate Warren Buffett once famously observed: “You don’t find out who has been swimming naked until the tide goes out.” Read More
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Last Tuesday, on the 75th anniversary of the independence of India, Prime Minister Narendra Modi promised to turn India into a developed country within the next 25 years. The demographic and economic signs are positive. The country’s population has grown fourfold since independence in 1947, but population growth has now dropped to replacement level: 2.1 […]
Hockey Canada must deal with a culture saturated in sexism, misogyny, homophobia and hypermasculinity
Shannon D. M. Moore, University of Manitoba Teresa Anne Fowler, Concordia University of Edmonton and Tim Skuce, Brandon University Research about men’s ice hockey has consistently revealed that the culture is saturated in sexism, misogyny, homophobia and hypermasculinity. Beyond research, people have come forward in highly publicized stories speaking to experiences of sexism, being silenced […]
Tallman: Friendships important to health, well-being
At a conference at the Chautauqua Institute in New York, many experts expounded on the importance of friendship. Here is a summary of my notes from the presentations.
Baranyai: Many worthy runners-up for word of the year
Among the many year-end retrospectives, I always enjoy Merriam-Webster’s “word of the year.”
Bloomfield: Canada needs to cultivate a new generation of farmers
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Dyer: Big shift lies ahead for world populations
In the politics of population, the magic number is 2.1. That is replacement level: if a country’s fertility rate (the average number of children a woman has in her lifetime) is 2.1, then the country’s population will remain level. Above that number, it starts to grow; below 2.1, it eventually falls.