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AskMen.com Dave Golokhov |
The Aging Y Chromosome Biologists now say that after a period of rapid crumbling, the Y chromosome has stabilized. |
ifeminists April 6, 2005 Carey Roberts |
Gender: Good Riddance, Farewell Scientists back the idea that anatomical and functional gender differences exist. |
ifeminists August 16, 2006 Carey Roberts |
A Woman Can Do Anything a Man Can Do (Well, Almost) Mom and dad are not interchangeable: little boys don't identify with their moms the same way they bond with their dads. And girls learn different lessons from dads than from moms. |
Scientific American June 2007 Sally Lehrman |
Going Beyond X and Y Babies born with mixed sex organs often get immediate surgery. New genetic studies, Eric Vilain says, should force a rethinking about sex assignment and gender identity. |
Science News July 4, 2008 Tia Ghose |
The Score: How the Quest for Sex Has Shaped the Modern Man "What makes a man?" Faye Flam, a science writer who pens a sex column for The Philadelphia Inquirer, seeks a scientific answer to this often-asked question in her latest book. |
Salon.com May 25, 2002 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Our shiny happy clone future Procreation without sex, smarter babies and the right to choose the sexual orientation of your kids -- it's all good, says scientist Gregory Stock... |
ifeminists August 12, 2003 Carey Roberts |
Male-Bashing and a Foreboding of the Future When feminists call for global "decontamination" by phasing-out men, I can't help but think of the lies and accusations leveled against the Jews in Nazi Germany, and the similarities to contemporary gender feminism. |
Bio-IT World September 9, 2002 Kevin Davies |
The Debate Over Race Relations Are self-identified labels of race useful in large-scale population genetic studies? A provocative commentary from a leading Stanford University geneticist has fuelled controversy. |
ifeminists June 17, 2003 Wendy McElroy |
A Conscientious Objector to the Gender War Future feminists will look back in disbelief at today's false notion of a built-in Gender War between men and women, in much the same way we regard past theories of a flat Earth. |
ifeminists May 26, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Female Virtue Takes a Beating at Abu Ghraib This time around, the ladies couldn't blame their actions on the male power structure. Here was female barbarism and debauchery, all on full-frontal display in the newspapers. |
ifeminists October 6, 2004 Carey Roberts |
Women Victimized by Feminist Fables Told to ignore reason and common sense, women found themselves vulnerable to the machinations of radical feminists. Under the guise of female liberation, these feminists set out to indoctrinate women into a three-tiered mythology. |
BusinessWeek June 13, 2005 John Carey |
The NIH's Roadmap for Research Charting the human genome was just the beginning. Now the focus is creating pathways that will lead to practical applications. |
Chemistry World February 23, 2007 Michael Gross |
X Labelling Springs a Surprise In stark contrast to expectations, researchers have found that the active versions of genes on X chromosomes are more heavily methylated than the inactive versions. |
ifeminists May 20, 2003 Myria |
From the Forum: Constructed Gender? Often referred to as "enculturation", the idea is that not only is your social gender role a matter of sociology, but your inner gender identity is as well. From that some theorize that your sexuality itself is extrapolated and is itself a construct and not an inherent component. But this theory is off-base. |
ifeminists September 2, 2003 Carey Roberts |
Calling the Bluff on Women's Athletics Let's stop this paternalistic "separate-and-unequal" treatment of female athletes. Let's allow the women to play against the men. |
Reason February 2003 Cathy Young |
Consciousness Raising 101 Inside the gender studies classroom |
Salon.com January 26, 2000 Cathy Young |
Out with the old and out with the new Feminism of every stripe has failed. It's time for a gender equality movement. |
Reason Aug/Sep 2000 Ronald Bailey |
Strands of Life Book Review: Genome: The Autobiography of a Species in 23 Chapters, by Matt Ridley |
ifeminists July 26, 2006 Carey Roberts |
Women Good, Men Bad? It's about time that we probe an assumption that has insidiously worked its way into our culture -- the notion that women are the guardians of goodness and grace, while all those male neanderthals are emissaries from the dark side. |
ifeminists October 21, 2003 Carey Roberts |
Why Hillary Won't Be Elected the First Female President Things are looking bleak for advocates who are pushing for a woman president in 2004. |
Chemistry World March 27, 2014 James Urquhart |
Synthetic yeast chromosome is fully functional The first complete and functional synthetic yeast chromosome has been created by a team of scientists based in the US. |
ifeminists January 27, 2004 K.C. Wilson |
Feminism Denies Male Nurturing to Exploit It Some feminists like to insist that nurturing is what distinguishes women, even makes them superior to men. |
ifeminists March 3, 2004 K. C. Wilson |
Male Nurturing 101 The real gender bias we all face is a society that defines aggression as "what men do," and nurturing as "what women do." This blinds us to the equal aggressiveness of women, and, more tragically, equal nurturing of masculinity. |
Popular Mechanics January 2010 Amber Angelle |
How to Create a Designer Baby Women undergoing in vitro fertilization could one day choose to have a baby boy with perfect vision, an aptitude for sports and a virtual lock on avoiding colon cancer. |
Wired August 2000 Jennifer Hillner |
Area 22 The inside story of the first fully sequenced chromosome. |
AFP eWire November 7, 2005 |
Gender Pay Gap Narrows at U.S. Charities, But Still Remains Unequal A new study reveals that despite increases, men continue to earn more than their female counterparts, with the median salary for a male CEO of a charity with a budget of $50 million or more $332,985 compared to $262,275 for a female CEO. |
HHMI Bulletin February 2011 |
Crucibles of Dynamism Puzzling pockets of redundancy account for about 5 percent of the human genome. Investigator Evan Eichler found a way to interpret what is happening in these areas of genetic repetition. |
AskMen.com |
Crime: A Family Thing? Although its legality has not been tested in court, a growing number of law enforcement agencies nationwide are considering whether to adopt a technique that entails looking through the database for a near-match rather than an exact match. |
ifeminists October 17, 2009 Richard L. Davis |
Intimate-Partner Homicide and Suicide My research paper about domestic violence-related deaths explains why so many people continue to know so little about domestic violence, which is not merely a women's issue since it impacts all of us. |
Job Journal January 16, 2005 Bob Rosner |
Working Wounded: Does Manager's Gender Matter? Is it better to work for a woman or a man? |
Fast Company September 2000 John Ellis |
The Secret of Life The mapping of the human genome, says Craig Venter, will change science, research, medicine, politics, health insurance, and the way biology looks at the last 3 billion years of evolution. And that's just the beginning. |
Science News April 15, 2006 Ivars Peterson |
Men, Women, Cars, and Crashes While a new study that shows male traffic fatalities outnumber female fatalities through all age brackets may suggest innate behavioral differences between the sexes, another plausible interpretation leans more toward social differences. |
ifeminists June 10, 2003 Warren Farrell |
Unhealthy Times The New York Times Book Review, a section that depends on objectivity, has instead an "attitude" toward men that is perhaps best reflected in this Book Review headline: Don't Expect Too Much of Men |
ifeminists August 31, 2005 Wendy McElroy |
Gender Bias in Domestic Violence Treatment The oldest battered-women's shelter in New England is setting precedent and making many feminists nervous in the process -- by launching a "gender-neutral" search for a new executive director. |
Bio-IT World March 8, 2005 Kevin Davies |
Evolution of New Genes Studied EMBL researchers use comparative genomic analysis to identify new primate-specific gene family. |
Wired May 2002 Brian Alexander |
The Remastered Race Artificial chromosomes and in vitro screening are giving new life to the eugenics debate. The question is not whether we want to engineer embryos but how far it should go... |
AskMen.com Wendy Walsh |
Male Fertility It's true: In the last 50 years, human male fertility has been declining. |
AskMen.com Matthew Fitzgerald |
Rules for the New Menaissance Want to break out of the cage of female "empowerment"? Here are a few rules for the newly liberated man to follow. |
Psychology Today Sep/Oct 2007 Mark Teich |
A Man's Shelf Life As men age, their fertility decreases and the health risks to their unborn offspring skyrocket. But men who attend to their health can slow down the reproductive clock. |
Psychology Today Mar/Apr 2008 Nando Pelusi |
Neanderthink: Desperation With a Difference Women are devastated by failing relationships, while men flail more over unattainable relationships. |
Salon.com May 25, 1999 Arthur Allen |
Is it in the genes? Is it in the genes?: Studies suggest human behavior isn't as predetermined as some thought. |
AskMen.com |
Birth Control For Men A leafy shrub growing in an Indonesian forest is home to a chemical that could provide male birth control in pill form. |
Scientific American July 2009 Charles Q. Choi |
Being More Infantile May Have Led to Bigger Brains Genetic evidence suggests that juvenile traits helped separate chimps from us |
ifeminists January 12, 2005 Carey Roberts |
Unequal Pay for Equal Work? There is no better example of how radical feminism hoodwinks women than the gender "wage gap" controversy. |
Salon.com May 1, 2000 Arthur Allen |
Listening to DNA The genome project is getting the buzz. But the real breakthroughs may come from labs out of the limelight, like Gene Logic. |
AskMen.com Autumn C. Koerbel |
Top 10: Weirdest Deep-Sea Creatures Not much is known about the underwater world of the deep sea, which is home to many strange creatures. |
ifeminists July 7, 2004 Diana Goss |
An Investigation Into the Prescribing of Drugs for Non-Medical Concerns In the light of new drugs being developed to resolve so-called "female sexual dysfunctions," it has now been clearly identified that female sexuality has been genderised by the way in which those who are analysing it would prefer us all to view this. |
HHMI Bulletin May 2011 Sarah C.P. Williams |
The Pace of Evolution A close look at the human genome shows the slow and steady beat of adaptation. |
American Family Physician September 1, 2005 Wattendorf & Muenke |
Prader-Willi Syndrome A review on Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) to aid physicians in recognizing and diagnosing children with this genetic disorder. PWS is the most common form of obesity caused by a genetic syndrome. |
InternetNews March 29, 2010 |
Women the Minority in Europe's IT 'Boys Club' Report says only about 35 percent of IT staffing jobs in Europe are held by women. The report comes amid complaints of inequality related to working conditions. |