Social
The sports that look unusual until the crowd arrives
Some sports feel niche until you look closely. Darts, snooker, kabaddi, and others attract huge audiences because they reward tension and ritual.
Israel’s annual Orphanhood Report indicates a deterioration in orphans’ mental well-being
Conversation as a tool for community understanding
What learning a new language can teach you about yourself
As Israelis deal with wounds of war, people with disabilities show the way - opinion
Israel’s current war has left deep emotional wounds still in need of healing. Yet we can take pride in knowing that Shalva fulfilled its national responsibility with devotion and dignity.
Why Miami’s entrepreneurs are embracing hybrid work and premium coworking
Tel Aviv’s celebrated Irish hub Molly Bloom’s hits 25 years
Three days of supping, music, and fun and games await the Molly Bloom’s crowd.
From social to fintech: Israeli engineer Itamar Gil’s engineering leadership journey
The overlooked victims: Israel's vulnerable populations struggle as war diverts needed resources
Focus on the war has diverted attention away from vulnerable populations who depend on social services to survive.
Building bridges, not walls: A woman's lessons from the past decade - opinion
I believe Israel will only be truly strong if it learns to view Arab society not as a challenge to be managed but as a valuable resource to be invested in.
Media depictions of aging reinforce view of older adults as dependent - study
New research suggests that, through images, popular media too often characterizes older adults as “dependent rather than productive members of society," arguing that these images construct reality.
What makes people 'cool'? Study unveils universal traits
Despite cultural differences, 'cool' people worldwide are seen as extraverted, hedonistic, powerful, adventurous, open, and autonomous.
A whale beauty routine: Researchers document orcas using kelp for social grooming
Using drones, researchers observed southern resident killer whales using bull kelp in a behavior called 'allokelping'.
Most people overrate their moral resistance, says Ohio State study
Philip mazzocco said, 'social pressures are way more powerful and impactful than we give them credit for'.