Funny you mentioned men's higher homicide. Who are killing these men? Their fellow men.
Who is mostly killing women? Men.
Please explain how that isn't gendered?
Educational institutions, interesting one. Why is it in the ME, especially in Gulf countries in which the genders are segregated with men having access to male teachers, staff and in male dominated environments still underperform compared to women?
Angie, IPV/DV trends are largely systemic and go beyond your endemic menz r bad mantra. For example, women in the US commit almost four times the number of homicides than both genders do in Japan (0.78 per 100,000 for American women vs the 0.2 per 100,000 for the Japanese). Why is this? Well, Japan is a country that possesses: a conformist mindset, ethnically homogenous, high rates of two-parent homes, very low rates of gun ownership, low inequality, and affluent developed country with social blankets. We know systemic factors such as: poverty, dysfunctional family structure, lack of security blanket, racial and gender prejudice, lack of social mobility all shape trends and accordingly Japanese men commit a fraction of homicides that American women do.
I showed you before (with data) women have higher rates of child abuse than men and lesbian relationships have the highest IPV rate of all adult pairings (gay men being the lowest, heterosexual women in the intermediate). Does this mean women are an inherent risk to children and other women?? Your inclination to characterize men as naturally more abusive than women obfuscates your understanding of the trends in reality as it lacks context and isn't consistent with the empirical data we have.
As for educational attainment, I'm not familiar with the trends in the gulf. But your premise is flawed because I'm not arguing that either men or women are naturally more well-suited for school. I said a multitude of social and cultural factors besides biological gender (many being systemic) play a role in the trends we see everywhere in the world. In East Asia and Singapore, educational attainment is gender neutral. In the US, among young adults, women attain 25% more bachelor degrees than men. Zoom in a bit more towards minorities in the US, in the black community the aforementioned trend is more exacerbated; in the Asian community, we see Asian men attain more degrees than every demographic of women besides Asian women. Again things like: family structure, poverty, racial and gender prejudice, lack of social mobility, all factor into the trends that exist.