Focus on Feminism: North Korea
North Korea officially recognized the equality of women and men in 1945, but their notion of true equality has not progressed much since that time.
Read moreNorth Korea officially recognized the equality of women and men in 1945, but their notion of true equality has not progressed much since that time.
Read moreDespite the high levels of gender-based violence in Brazil, gender equality has been prevalent in the fight for social justice.
Read moreFeminist superheroes have flown over the house of the patriarchy and raised the female flag, creating safe passage for those behind them.
Read moreOn November 8, the College of Arts and Sciences Buccino Leadership Cohort held a Domestic Violence Awareness Panel.
Read moreOn Thursday, November 7, the College of Arts and Sciences’ Middle Eastern Studies Program organized a lecture on Dr. Roham Alvandi’s book Nixon, Kissinger, and the Shah: The United States and Iran in the Cold War.
Read moreDr. Anthony Clark – sinologist, historian, writer, professor at Whitworth University, and researcher in the Vatican – came to Seton Hall’s Provost to talk about the Sino-Vatican Agreement and the ongoing conflict between China and the Vatican.
Read moreThe United States has seen the most unfortunate climate leadership. When one president signs a climate agreement, the successor who represents the opposing party can fail to ratify the agreement or even withdraw the United States entirely.
Read moreWhile collateral damage is not a new word to the Islamic State, the al-Baghdadi children are not just another two names to be added to a growing list. Their deaths illustrate the lengths that this self-described “caliphate” will go to give preeminence to ideology in an ever-evolving war kept alive by an estimated 14,000 operatives still active across Iraq and Syria.
Read moreWeary of the abuses, feeling abandoned and in anguish, one million Chileans took their mass frustration to the streets of Santiago to protest.
Read moreWhen the President announced plans to withdraw military forces from Syria, he was surprisingly met with opposition from members of both the Democratic and Republican parties.
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