From House to Home: Bringing work home

Charles Handy | 14 October 2008 | comment 3

Changes in the world of work can help reshape the home and make it an ideal school of life.

Sharia law for Britain?

Charlotte Thorneycroft | 22 February 2008 | comment 11

Giving recognition to aspects of sharia, as suggested by the Archbishop of Canterbury, would damage the principle of equality before the law.

The faith of the Irish

Seamus Grimes | 30 January 2008 | comment 4

Secularization is taking its toll in newly-prosperous Ireland but there are young voices speaking up again for the old values.

Polling season

Christopher Blunt | 24 January 2008 | comment 4

With the tightest race for years in the US presidential primaries, opinion polls have become more important than ever. Can they be trusted?

Ethical dilemmas in world soccer

Walter Pless | 15 November 2007 | comment 1

The globalisation of soccer has made the game both more beautiful and more ugly, says one of the world's leading sports writers.

Monkey business

Marie I. George | 12 July 2007 | comment 14

Chimps can paint, use tools and show affection. So what makes them different from us?

Cut to the chaste

Dawn Eden | 29 June 2007 | comment 7

A former rock music journalist has created a stir with her renunciation of sex-in-the-city and a manifesto on chastity.

Over-worked, time-poor: who’s at fault?

Paul Shepanski | 15 June 2007 | comment 1

The economy is booming but Australians are far from happy about what is happening to their family and community life.

For the sake of the children

David Blankenhorn | 26 April 2007 | comment 4

A family scholar explains why he - reluctantly - had to write about what is wrong with same sex marriage.

The sad side of gay parenting

Dawn Stefanowicz | 25 April 2007 | comment 16

A Canadian woman was raised in an unconventional household. Now she tells her story.

Harvard’s stem cell misstep

Michael Cook | 29 June 2006 | comment 2

Harvard University has given the cause of therapeutic cloning the backing of its immense prestige. A stem cell scientist tells MercatorNet that this is based on inflated hopes and bad science.

Volunteer tourism: the give and take

Carolyn Moynihan | 03 February 2006 | comment 1

Young people seeking a focus for their idealism increasingly find that a spell of volunteering in a developing country helps.

Critiquing consumerism

Rafael Serrano | 29 November 2005

British philosopher John Haldane thinks that religion has a bad PR problem and that people with deep religious convictions need to freshen up their image.

Development requires virtue, says Nobel Peace Prize winner

Alistair Gould | 12 November 2005 | comment 1

MercatorNet interviews 2004 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Wangari Maathai, founder of Kenya's Green Belt Movement.

Fighting AIDS by bolstering African families

Carolyn Moynihan | 26 August 2005 | comment 1

Strengthening the family is the answer to many of Africa's ailments, says Kenyan paediatrician, mother and award-winning novelist Margaret Ogola.

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