Carolyn Moynihan

Carolyn Moynihan is an Auckland (New Zealand) journalist with a special interest in family issues. She is Deputy Editor of MercatorNet and editor of Family Edge.


    Bomb scare

    Carolyn Moynihan | 2 Jul 2005
    Infertility is a time bomb threatening the very existence of Europe, experts in the field said this week. Is anyone taking them seriously?


    Where did he come from?

    Carolyn Moynihan | 24 Jun 2005
    In the ultimate feel-good finish, Michael Campbell, an unheralded New Zealander, picked off Tiger Woods in the US Open.


    Calibrating happiness

    Carolyn Moynihan | 24 Jun 2005
    By 2020 depression will be the second-largest cause of disability in the world for both men and women of all ages. So researchers are beavering away on what makes us happy. Have they got it right?


    Making better people

    Carolyn Moynihan | 18 Jun 2005
    Want a smarter baby? A faster baby? A blonder baby? Prepared to pay for it? You might be able to some day if transhumanists have their way.


    Tolerance and her children

    Carolyn Moynihan | 10 Jun 2005
    Young Germans are using shock tactics to rattle the liberalism of their parents, and sending a message about tolerance to the West.


    Debunking the flat earth theory

    Carolyn Moynihan | 3 Jun 2005
    The mediaevals didn’t believe in a flat earth; the Galileo affair was a beat-up; and missionaries were great scientists. Any other questions about the conflict between religion and science?


    Mother knows best

    Carolyn Moynihan | 27 May 2005
    Science is revealing the brain-enhancing changes that come with motherhood. An interview with the author of The Mommy Brain.


    A life's a life for all that

    Carolyn Moynihan | 10 Dec 2004
    In May this year a New Zealand man smothered his five-month-old daughter after she was diagnosed with lissencephalus, meaning her brain was profoundly under-developed and she would never walk or talk. Recently it took a jury only 47 minutes to find the father not guilty of any crime - a verdict that has made the position of disabled infants suddenly more precarious. Carolyn Moynihan spoke with a woman who deplores this turn of events and appeals for more understanding of disabled people and their families.



    What women need is a Kyoto Protocol of their own

    Carolyn Moynihan | 26 Nov 2004
    Some things in life are predictable. If you play with fire, the old saying goes, you get burnt. If you drive too fast you crash. And if you live in a highly sexualized society you may be taken for a sex object and raped.


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