All articles
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Nation & WorldHow to liberate African artIn a Harvard Center for African Studies workshop, scholar Ciraj Rassool urges fuller reckoning with colonial legacies.  
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Nation & World‘Life of the mother’ is suddenly vulnerableHarvard Law faculty address the legal questions that almost certainly will be up for debate in a post-Dobbs world.  
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Campus & CommunityPutting access for all firstHarvard’s affinity group for people with disabilities and their allies, Ability+, celebrates two years.  
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Campus & CommunityGreen light for first phase of Harvard’s Enterprise Research CampusAllston project wins unanimous approval from Boston Planning and Development Agency.  
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Campus & CommunityCommitting to good, for goodMartha Minow, chair of the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery implementation committee, talks about the work begun to fulfill the report’s recommendations.  
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Campus & CommunityA step toward a more gender-inclusive HarvardSherri Charleston and Nicole Merhill discuss an expanded set of self-identity options available to Harvard employees in PeopleSoft.  
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Work & EconomySo what happened to crypto?Harvard Business School’s Scott Duke Kominers explains the recent downturn in the cryptocurrency market.  
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Nation & WorldWere Jan. 6 attackers extremists? Protesters? Patriots?How race, gun ownership, and feelings about Black Lives Matter shape Americans’ views of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack.  
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HealthSpirituality linked with better health outcomes, patient careSpirituality should be incorporated into care for both serious illness and overall health, according to a study led by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Brigham and Women’s Hospital.  
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HealthAlzheimer’s disease biomarkers can predict post-op deliriumResearchers have found a way to predict if an Alzheimer’s patient will develop postoperative delirium, a common complication in older patients.  
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Campus & CommunityClass of 2026 yield continues robust trendAdmitted students will benefit from expansion of Harvard Financial Aid Initiative.  
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HealthDrivers who are frustrated, distracted, mad — and somewhat rustyTraffic stats show that roadway deaths spiked during the pandemic. Can it be that we were not only distracted and frustrated, but also out of practice?  
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Science & TechTracing history of early seafarers through genesNew genetic research shows untold migration to remote Pacific islands was generally matrilocal.  
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Campus & CommunityPritzker on road ahead for HarvardThe Harvard Gazette sat down with Penny Pritzker ’81, who became the Harvard Corporation’s senior fellow on July 1, to talk about her deep ties to Harvard and her views on today’s economic challenges.  
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Science & TechTeaching algorithms about skin tonesGoogle adopts sociologist’s skin-tone scale, which aims to promote inclusion, diversity, help fix problems in facial recognition, other technologies.  
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HealthCoffee is good for you, probablyA recent study says you may not need to drink coffee without sugar to gain the health benefits. HMS’ Christina Wee discusses the state of science on coffee’s attributes as a health drink.  
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Nation & WorldShould Trump be charged in Capitol attack?Harvard Kennedy School political historian Alexander Keyssar discusses revelations about former President Trump and his top White House aides at this week’s Jan. 6 hearing.  
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Nation & World‘Shadow pandemic’ of domestic violenceMarianna Yang, a clinical instructor at the Family and Domestic Violence Law Clinic at WilmerHale Legal Services Center of Harvard Law School, discusses the rise of domestic violence during the pandemic.  
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Nation & WorldHow Roe got to be RoeSchlesinger Library holdings document long, pitched dispute over abortion in archival documents, photos, letters, voices of women.  
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Science & TechNovel food wrap offers shelf preservationHarvard researchers have developed a biodegradable, antimicrobial food packaging system that extends shelf life and eliminates foodborne illness.  
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Nation & WorldClarence Thomas isn’t kiddingLegal scholar Mary Ziegler sees “selective” history in SCOTUS ruling overturning Roe v. Wade and signs that other landmark protections are in jeopardy.  
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HealthThunderstorm asthmaA new study reports an increase in cases of “thunderstorm asthma,” putting allergy and asthma sufferers on alert.  
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Arts & CultureFunny ladyEmma Eun-joo Choi ’23 is the host of the new NPR comedy podcast “Everyone & Their Mom.”  
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Nation & WorldMemories of air-raid sirens, bombed-out tanks near KyivUkrainian physicians from Mass. General and Brigham & Women’s are leveraging what they see as their most effective asset — knowledge — to help those back home.  
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Nation & WorldHow Title IX transformed colleges, universities over past 50 yearsIt upended intercollegiate sports but also forced shifts in hiring, promotion, admissions, reckoning on sexual harassment, assault.  
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Science & TechBrain practices new tasks while we sleepResearchers look at “replay” during sleep, which is theorized to be a strategy the brain uses to remember new information.  
 
							 
							 
							


