All articles


  • Science & Tech

    Creating 3-D tissue and its potential for regeneration

    “This latest work extends the capabilities of our multi-material bioprinting platform to thick human tissues, bringing us one step closer to creating architectures for tissue repair and regeneration,” says the study’s senior author, Jennifer A. Lewis of both the Wyss Institute and Harvard’s Paulson School for Engineering and Applied Sciences.

  • Arts & Culture

    Engaging with Arendt

    Four lectures focusing on Hannah Arendt, the political theorist best known for coining the phrase “the banality of evil” when she wrote about the trial of Nazi architect Adolf Eichmann for The New Yorker in the early ’60s, will be held March 9 and 30 and April 6 and 20 at the Minda de Gunzburg…

  • Science & Tech

    The costs of inequality: For women, progress until they get near power

    In recent decades, women have made progress in pay and parity with men in such professions as medicine and law. But when it comes to running things at the highest levels, it’s generally still a man’s world.

  • Campus & Community

    A limit on football tackling

    Harvard football coach Tim Murphy explains the unanimous vote by the Ivy League’s coaches to end full-contact practices, promoting safety.

  • Nation & World

    Leadership tips from ancient Rome

    Harvard Business School M.B.A. students dig deep into texts of the Roman Empire to unearth lessons about leadership today.

  • Nation & World

    Retracing a path of destruction

    Timothy Snyder, a history professor at Yale, talks about his new book, “Black Earth.”

  • Campus & Community

    President’s Challenge narrows field to 10 finalists

    Ten teams have been selected as finalists for the 2016 President’s Challenge, President Drew Faust will award $100,000 to be shared among the grand prize winners on April 25.

  • Campus & Community

    Refresh, recuperate, reflect

    A Harvard freshman considers the lessons of winter break.

  • Arts & Culture

    Humanities offer marketability in a competitive world

    Harvard sophomore finds support for his concentration in Ancient History (Greek and Roman), which allows him to pursue his passions “while maintaining marketability in an increasingly competitive world.”

  • Arts & Culture

    Slavery’s chilling shadow

    Toni Morrison delivered the first of six Charles Eliot Norton Lectures to an adoring crowd at Sanders Theatre on Wednesday. Morrison is the 58th scholar given the Charles Eliot Norton Professorship of Poetry.

  • Science & Tech

    Study that undercut psych research got it wrong

    A study last year claiming that more than half of all psychology studies cannot be replicated turns out to be wrong. Harvard researchers have discovered that the study contains several statistical and methodological mistakes, and that when these are corrected, the study actually shows that the replication rate in psychology is quite high.

  • Campus & Community

    My buddy

    Juniors Fatima Bishtawi and Amanda Mozea made lasting connections through the Best Buddies program.

  • Health

    Aspirin found to reduce overall cancer risk

    An analysis of data from two long-term epidemiologic studies has found that regular use of aspirin significantly reduces the overall risk of cancer, an effect that primarily reflects a lower risk of colorectal cancer and other tumors of the gastrointestinal tract.

  • Campus & Community

    Philip Blackett tells teens what follows failure

    Magnetic Interviewing founder and CEO Philip Blackett, an M.B.A. candidate at Harvard Business School, shared his failures and what can follow with students from Cambridge Rindge and Latin.

  • Arts & Culture

    Seeing more

    In his weekly 90-minute lectures, Professor Robin Kelsey brings historical awareness and contextual experience to 13 technologies that have transformed visual communication.

  • Science & Tech

    $1M in grants to support 10 climate research projects

    Ten research projects driven by faculty collaborators across six Harvard Schools will share over $1 million in the second round of grants awarded by the Climate Change Solutions Fund, an initiative launched last year by President Drew Faust to encourage multidisciplinary research around climate change.

  • Campus & Community

    President Faust’s climate initiative awards $1M in grants

    The recipients of grants awarded by the Climate Change Solutions Fund, an initiative launched last year by President Drew Faust, were announced. The 10 winning projects are purposely diverse in focus, ranging from policy and law to science and health. Several use Harvard’s campus as a “living laboratory” — when possible — for testing and…

  • Science & Tech

    The shifts from climate change

    Grasslands across North America will face higher summer temperatures and widespread drought by the end of the century, a study says, but those negative effects should be offset by an earlier start to the spring growing season and warmer winter.

  • Nation & World

    The costs of inequality: A goal of justice, a reality of unfairness

    America’s prison system houses huge numbers of inmates, many of them serving lengthy mandatory sentences, but research finds little evidence that it produces criminal deterrence.

  • Nation & World

    In GOP race, rage is all the rage

    Harvard analysts discuss the deep roots of Republican anger driving this confounding and historic 2016 election.

  • Campus & Community

    Harvard joins in filing NLRB brief

    Harvard joins other private universities in legal brief asking NLRB to keep prior ruling avoiding graduate student unions.

  • Arts & Culture

    ‘Ways with Words’ conference will spark conversation

    The Radcliffe Institute will host “Ways with Words: Exploring Language and Gender,” a conference on March 3-4 that explores the interplay of gender, language, and why Facebook now offers three pronouns.

  • Campus & Community

    Faculty Council meeting held Feb. 24

    On Feb. 24 the members of the Faculty Council met. Their next council meeting is March 9. The next meeting of the faculty is March 1.

  • Nation & World

    Clean Power Plan’s legal future ‘a mess’

    The future of the President Obama’s Clean Power Plan hangs in the balance with the Supreme Court vote to freeze the plan in place, halting implementation while legal issues are decided by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit and, likely, by the Supreme Court itself.

  • Nation & World

    Variations on racial tension

    Weatherhead Center panelists highlighted striking contrasts in how nations perceive and grapple with racial inequality.

  • Nation & World

    Case for reparation gains international force

    Distinguished scholar and activist Sir Hilary Beckles, who is leading the international effort to seek restitution from European nations that engaged in the slave trade in the Caribbean, made the case for reparations during a talk at Harvard Law School this week.

  • Nation & World

    Business as usual

    Evelyn Krache Morris, an associate with the International Security Program of the Belfer Center, assesses the Mexican drug trade in the wake of the arrest of El Chapo, the world’s most powerful trafficker.

  • Arts & Culture

    Blended voices, each with a personal charge

    Five poets are celebrated in “‘A Language to Hear Myself’: Feminist Poets Speak,” a Schlesinger Library exhibit running from Feb. 29 to June 17, with an accompanying performance March 1.

  • Campus & Community

    Kleckner receives Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal

    Nancy Kleckner, the Herchel Smith Professor of Molecular Biology, has been awarded the Thomas Hunt Morgan Medal by the Genetics Society of America in recognition of her many significant contributions to our understanding of chromosomes and the mechanisms of inheritance.

  • Nation & World

    Ever-present Orwell

    “What’s intriguing about bringing ‘1984’ back now is that some of those questions are out there again,” said Ash Center director Anthony Saich, an expert on Chinese politics. The Ash Center is co-sponsoring, with the A.R.T., a series of discussions on “topics that spark out of ‘1984.’” The next in the series of discussions is…