
Not just shellshock: we have accounts of PTSD in warfare from Homer to the Middle Ages
Sep 24, 2018 07:09 am UTC| Insights & Views Health
In the BBCs Bodyguard, Richard Madden plays a police protection officer and veteran soldier who is exhibiting signs of PTSD. In episode three he tries to strangle the woman he is supposed to be safeguarding. Later, a...
Cochrane Collaboration expels co-founder splitting board and prompting walkout
Sep 24, 2018 07:05 am UTC| Insights & Views Health
The Cochrane Collaboration, a highly respected international medical research organisation that conducts systematic reviews and guides clinical practice, has been rocked by a scandal. Professor Peter Gøtzsche, a...

Spray-on antennas unlock communication of the future
Sep 24, 2018 07:05 am UTC| Insights & Views Technology
Hear the word antenna and you might think about rabbit ears on the top of an old TV or the wire that picks up radio signals for a car. But an antenna can be much smaller even invisible. No matter its shape or size, an...
Why stigma against victims of domestic violence persists in Indonesia
Sep 24, 2018 07:02 am UTC| Insights & Views Law
To mark CAUSINDY (the Conference of Australian and Indonesian Youth) held in Makassar this month, The Conversation presents analysis from academics involved in the conference. On 22 September 2004, Indonesia enacted the...
Mali faces a turning point as the country prepares for legislative poll
Sep 24, 2018 07:00 am UTC| Insights & Views Politics
How credible were the 2018 presidential elections in Mali? Going by the allegations of stuffed ballot boxes, theft of election materials, threats and attacks against election officials, arson at polling stations,...

Fourth industrial revolution: sorting out the real from the unreal
Sep 24, 2018 07:00 am UTC| Insights & Views Technology
The phrase fourth industrial revolution has become ubiquitous. Its meant to denote a huge shift in the socioeconomic fabric of society, driven by the availability of increasingly intelligent machines. These will be able to...
South African court frees cannabis from colonial and apartheid past
Sep 24, 2018 06:54 am UTC| Insights & Views Law
A ruling by the South African Constitutional Court opens the way for decriminalising private use of cannabis, locally known as dagga. It marks a definitive shift in a century of notoriously punitive drug policy, recognised...