
Male Psychology: The Magazine
Invisible Man: My Experience as a Male Trainee Clinical Psychologist in a Female-Dominated System
If the situation was reversed, I would never dismiss the contributions from female colleagues purely because they were female and their experiences were different to my own.
“Men won't CLAM up if you're male-friendly!” A brief guide to supporting men’s mental health.
Against the backdrop of this thinking, the Centre for Male Psychology has come up with 'bite size' guidance of five points to think about in relation to men’s mental health.
From foster homes to Air Force, Cambridge and beyond: an interview with Rob Henderson
“The place that people feel least free to speak their minds are oftentimes university, which I found absolutely stunning.”
Exercise science is weakened by gender ideology: an interview with Dr James Nuzzo
Peer reviewers seem to be more accepting of my research on physiological differences between men and women (e.g., muscle fatigability) and less accepting of my research on psychological differences.
Men should express their feelings, but not about feminism. Introducing the German antifeminism hotline.
The attempt to prevent criticism of radical feminism actually poses a threat to democracy and civil liberties.
Why Men don’t write about Sex and Dating
…are men being discouraged from showing sensitivity and awareness about their experiences because it implies insensitivity and a lack of awareness towards women?
But seriously folks, shouldn’t psychologists take humour more seriously? Interview with evolutionary psychologist Dr Gil Greengross
Generally speaking men’s humour is a good predictor of relationship satisfaction, as long as the woman appreciates it. A lot of studies show that men try to impress women with humour.
Taking an historical view of men’s mental health: an interview with medical historian Ali Haggett
I was left with no doubt that men were struggling in myriad ways with stress and psychological illness – yet it has always been the discourse of the ‘desperate housewife’ that has attracted the most publicity, both in medicine and popular culture
How the Manosphere led us to develop better mental health services for men
men are driven [to the Manosphere] because they feel lonely, misunderstood and there is a lack of male-friendly services elsewhere.
Approaching parental alienation with compassion and common sense: An interview with counselling psychologist Dr Sue Whitcombe.
…many professionals seem to interpret the evidence “most convicted child sex offenders are men”, as “children are more at risk from their father than their mother.
Are men less willing to engage in traditional talking therapy because therapy has been feminised?
Gamma bias […] plays down positive aspects of masculinity, whilst rejecting the notion of men as victims.