A new typology helps explain why perpetrators target reproduction and why international law has been so slow to hold them accountable.
YouTube on MSN
5 things we still get wrong about human reproduction
You'd think we'd know everything there is to know about sexual reproduction. But as it turns out, there are still quite a few things we picked up that aren't exactly true, and we're here to correct ...
The human brain's soft folds and ridges, arising in early development and continuing through the first 18 months of life, are ...
Quite an advantage in today’s world.
Early in development, many animals pick a team—male or female—based on their genetics, and, with time, acquire the ...
Coyotes mate for life, mourn their dead, and even help forests grow, revealing deep emotional lives and vital roles in wild ...
Using historical data on women in Finland, researchers discovered that having five or more children—or no children at all—is ...
New research shows how surface material and temperature change how long viruses survive and whether they can still spread.
For flowering plants, reproduction is a question of the birds and the bees. Attracting the right pollinator can be a matter ...
New research shows how sperm RNA changes as men age, revealing a biological shift that may affect reproduction and child ...
Perhaps the most compelling argument for the distinction between human and AI music lies in the nature of creativity itself.
Colonialism did not merely exploit African women; it transformed them into permanent infrastructure for empire. African women ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results