All articles


  • Nation & World

    A Platonic ideal of a news website

    Adam Moss, now a fall fellow at the Shorenstein Center for Media, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard Kennedy School, launches an eight-week workshop for students to consider the current business realities of political journalism and develop an ideal of a financially viable news site that delivers what readers want and need.

    Legendary NY magazine editor Adam Moss
  • Arts & Culture

    Creative research at heart of ArtLab

    The ArtLab, Harvard’s newest Allston lab, open its doors for some creative research.

    Three people at the event
  • Campus & Community

    Good cop, nice cop

    Depending on whom you ask, the most photographed Harvard institution is either the John Harvard Statue, Massachusetts Hall, or Harvard University Police Department Officer Charles Marren. “I might be more…

  • Nation & World

    To free every child

    Nobel Peace Prize winner Kailash Satyarthi will visit the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health to take part in panel discussion and a screening of “The Price of Free,” a documentary about his life and his mission to fight against child labor and trafficking.

    Peace Prize joint-winner Kailash Satyarth
  • Work & Economy

    New interactive website helps chart paths for economic growth

    Harvard Kennedy School researchers launch interactive online tool to aid planners in identifying economic growth strategies.

    Computer screen
  • Nation & World

    On the road to impeachment?

    Harvard faculty react to the opening of an impeachment inquiry into President Trump by the House of Representatives and discuss what it may mean for the country.

    Nancy Pelosi
  • Arts & Culture

    Using art to inspire action

    Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University and Climate Creatives are using art and design to create an event to help people see the urgent need to act on climate change.

    Rising Waters in Provincetown art project
  • Campus & Community

    Dean of continuing education set to retire

    Huntington D. Lambert, dean of Harvard’s Division of Continuing Education, to retire at the end of this year.

    Huntington D. Lambert
  • Nation & World

    Change is collective

    Sarah Lockridge-Steckel is co-founder and CEO of The Collective, a nonprofit organization that provides pathways to opportunities for young adults through partnerships with education institutions and employers in her hometown of Memphis, Tennessee.

    Sarah and a Collective member laughing at a table
  • Campus & Community

    Harvard’s Mitrovica awarded MacArthur ‘genius grant’

    Jerry X. Mitrovica, the Frank Baird Jr. Professor of Science in the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences at Harvard, was awarded a “genius grant” by the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

    Jerry Mitrovica, MacArthur genius grant recipient
  • Arts & Culture

    Judging a book

    Clint Smith is a writer and teacher whose collection of poetry, “Counting Descent,” was published in 2016. He is currently working on a doctoral dissertation exploring how people sentenced as juveniles to life without parole make meaning of education while incarcerated.

    Clint Smiling
  • Science & Tech

    Ending ‘dead zones’

    Harvard scientists are teaming up with sustainability officers and landscaping experts to test a new fertilizer that won’t wash into water supplies.

    Hands holding dirt
  • Science & Tech

    Up close and personal with neuronal networks

    Researchers from Harvard University have developed an electronic chip that can perform high-sensitivity intracellular recording from thousands of connected neurons simultaneously, allowing them to identify hundreds of synaptic connections.

    Neurons on device
  • Campus & Community

    Why Harvard football still matters

    Continuity, heritage, and ritual are central to the enduring magnetism and mystique of Harvard football.

    Harvard Stadium
  • Campus & Community

    Harvard to cut food-related greenhouse gas emissions

    Harvard signs Cool Food Pledge, vows to cut food-related greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent by 2030.

    Healthy food
  • Campus & Community

    When Gore was Widener

    Before Widener, there was Gore Hall, an imposing Gothic Revival-style building once “regarded with pride as the chief distinction of the College and of the city.”

    Sepia image of exterior of Gore Hall.
  • Campus & Community

    Rural schools, researchers tackle nagging problems

    A look at the National Center for Rural Education Research Networks, six months after it launched with a $10 million grant from the Institute of Education Sciences at the U.S. Department of Education.

    Professors talking
  • Nation & World

    National parks’ economic benefits put at over $100B annually

    A new economic analysis of the U.S. National Park system puts its value to Americans at more than $100 billion, a figure that dwarfs the financially strapped agency’s $2.5 billion budget and underpins a call to change how what has been called “America’s Best Idea” is financed.

    Glacier Point at Yosemite National Park.
  • Nation & World

    An ounce of prevention

    Jim Langford is the president of the Georgia Prevention Project, the MillionMile Greenway, and the Coosawattee Foundation. For the past decade he has been raising awareness about the rising drug epidemic in his state.

    Jim in front of a barn with a jacket on
  • Campus & Community

    Seeking solid return on philanthropy

    The Gazette spoke with John Palfrey, former Henry N. Ess III Professor of Law and vice dean for Library and Information Resources at HLS, and former executive director of the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society about how his Harvard time prepared him for his new role to lead one of the country’s largest…

    Former Harvard Law School professor John Palfrey is the new head of the MacArthur Foundation.
  • Nation & World

    Emerald city

    Alexis Wheeler founded the Harvard Club of Seattle Crimson Achievement Program (CAP) to help illuminate the path to college for high-potential high school students from Western Washington school districts that serve predominantly low-income populations.

    Alexis perched on a boulder with rugged mountains in the background; Seattle cityscape; CAP students studying
  • Nation & World

    Mail priorities

    Madelyn Petersen explored her passions for business and human rights and community lawyering at Harvard Law School. She is currently interning with the Corporate Accountability Lab in Chicago before starting a clerkship with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.

    Madelyn standing in front of a whiteboard during a legal design workshop; Iowa statehood commemorative stamp; a row of mailboxes in rural Iowa
  • Campus & Community

    Global strike comes to Harvard

    Harvard students and those from Cambridge public schools joined their voices in a rally calling for climate change action Friday on Harvard’s Science Center Plaza.

    Gina McCarthy speaks at Climate Rally
  • Nation & World

    Improving the odds

    Erica Mosca founded Leaders in Training (LIT) in 2012, an organization that helps prospective first-generation college students from East Las Vegas high schools finish their degrees and work toward becoming leaders in their home state. She is herself a first-generation college graduate and a social justice advocate.

  • Science & Tech

    The future of mind control

    A new paper explores why neuron-like implants could offer a better way to treat brain disorders, control prosthetics, or even enhance cognitive abilities.

    raditional-neural-electrodes-versus-mesh-electronics
  • Campus & Community

    Harvard microbe hunter wins Blavatnik Award

    Emily Balskus will be honored on Sept. 23 with the Blavatnik National Award for Young Scientists for her work in tracking never-before-seen chemistry to specific bacteria in the human gut.

    Emily Balskus in her lab.
  • Campus & Community

    A link across campus

    Harvard Link is an application that for the first time funnels University-related events, news, organizations, and faculty and staff contact information into a centralized data bank. The system then analyzes that data and creates personalized dashboards for users based on their professional interests.

    Judy Singer (from left), Anne Margulies, and Dustin Tingley
  • Health

    Expressing genes

    Harvard University staff member Marnie Gelbart is the director of programs for the Personal Genetics Education Project (pgEd) at Harvard Medical School, and is a co-principal investigator of Building Awareness, Respect, and Confidence through Genetics (ARC), a five-year NIH-funded project through which pgEd is developing curricula on identity and inclusion working with teachers in urban…

    Marnie smiling out a window
  • Health

    Trust, belonging, keys to mental health of students of color

    Experts gathered at the Harvard Chan School said despite progress at making college student bodies more diverse, work still needs to be done to make students of all backgrounds feel welcome, a key step in heading off increased rates of mental illness such students experience on campus.

    Panel for mental health for people of color at Chan School
  • Science & Tech

    Solve ocean’s troubles and climate change too?

    Experts from Harvard and beyond gathered Monday to discuss the oceans’ plight in a warming world, offering hopeful solutions despite the often bleak assessment prompted by warming, pollution, acidification, and coral bleaching.