Male Psychology: The Magazine
Therapy can improve the mental health of prisoners and reduce criminality.
Grendon prison shows evidence of “reduced reoffending, improved health and well-being, and diversion from other more expensive services”
Brutalised children can become brutal adults: An interview with clinical and forensic psychologist Dr Naomi Murphy.
The brutality of the person's offence is generally related to the brutality of what they've experienced during childhood.
You can’t reduce domestic abuse by telling people that life is a power struggle between men and women. Interview with Professor Nicola Graham-Kevan
There is social power, there is structural power, and there is physical power. What women have in our society is the power of the state behind them, and men do not. Men only have that physical power, and most men don’t want to use it
What’s happened to the blue collar male, and why does it matter?
Blue collar males in the U.S. are experiencing higher incarceration rates, dying younger, using drugs more, and marrying less than ever before. Why?
Review of ‘The Mask You Live In’
As interesting as this movie might be, one important caveat should not be forgotten: it uses a very narrow definition of masculinity. The evidence for the existence of this type of masculinity is based mainly upon narrow populations – prison inmates and frat house partygoers.
It’s easier to blame men than to see men as victims
legal research demonstrates that men receive longer prison sentences than do women, even when they commit identical crimes. Experimental evidence shows the various ways in which people tend to see women as victims, and men as perpetrators.
Finding honey in the shitstorm: personal crisis, faith, and mental health
I crashed into a suicidal breakdown when I was 24. A carving knife in my own hand had been pointed at my heart before a friend dragged me to the local mental hospital