Nation & World

All Nation & World

  • A summer of service to cities

    Through the Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative, student fellows this summer helped mayors around the nation to improve the lives of residents.

    Storefront in Laredo, Texas.
  • Kerrey: Let’s re-emphasize critical thinking

    Let’s re-emphasize critical thinking, Bob Kerrey, former U.S. senator and current Minerva chairman tells HILT conference.

  • Matters of life or death

    Students learn lessons with Law School Professor Carol Steiker, who teaches “Capital Punishment in America” in the fall and a clinic in the spring. Her students represent death row prisoners by working as interns with law firms, NGOs, and governmental agencies.

  • Hundreds of experts, scholars back Harvard in admissions suit

    More than 500 social scientists, 16 statisticians and economists, numerous Asian American organizations, Harvard student and alumni groups and coalitions, the American Civil Liberties Union and the Asian American Legal Defense and Education Fund filed briefs in support of the University’s admissions policies on Thursday.

    Harry Elkins Widener Memorial Library
  • Letter opposes possible EPA shift

    Almost 100 faculty and leaders from Harvard and its affiliated teaching hospitals are asking the EPA in a letter to withdraw its proposal to increase “transparency” in the science that underlies regulations, saying the rule would harm human health.

  • President Bacow goes to Washington

    During one of his first public events as the University’s 29th leader, Harvard President Lawrence S. Bacow signaled he will be a steadfast advocate for public service and higher education.

    Larry Bacow.
  • Mayoral initiative heads for year two

    The Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative, which is housed at the Ash Center, is a collaboration among Harvard Kennedy School, Harvard Business School, and Bloomberg Philanthropies. Now entering its second year, the program helps mayors govern more creatively and effectively.

    The Bloomberg Harvard City Leadership Initiative mayors program.
  • Are there holes in the Constitution?

    Legal and political analysts across Harvard discuss some of the constitutional questions raised by the Trump administration’s actions, and the possible scope of a president’s power.

    Constitution of America,
  • Military, veterans study at Harvard

    The Warrior-Scholar Project at Harvard aims to ease military veterans’ transition to college life.

    Warrior-Scholar Project.
  • A full-time job fighting hate

    The ADL’s Evan Bernstein believes hate can be countered with a better understanding of the connected world in which we live.

  • Harvard ramps up focus on Europe

    A new academic program at the Kennedy School trains resources on an old and sometimes forgotten friend to the United States: Europe.

    Angela Merkel, Justin Trudeau, Donald Trump, and Emmanuel Macron at the G7 summit.
  • ‘From nowhere to somewhere’

    After surviving the slaughter in Darfur, Guy Josif Adam finds his way to Harvard Extension School with dreams of harnessing his education to transform Darfur and the wider turbulent region.

    Guy Adam
  • Impact of Justice Kennedy’s retirement examined

    Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy announced his retirement from the country’s top court Wednesday. Kennedy has long been a crucial swing vote on key Supreme Court decisions, and his replacement…

  • The global glory of soccer

    With the World Cup underway, the Gazette interviewed Mariano Siskind, professor of Romance languages and literatures and comparative literature, about the world’s biggest sports event, the humanity of the biggest soccer stars, and the meaning of soccer.

  • The worries over U.S. intelligence

    After nearly six decades in U.S. intelligence, former Director of National Intelligence James Clapper talks candidly about what he saw and learned protecting the country, and why he’s felt compelled in a new book to speak out about President Trump and the investigation into Russia’s interference in the 2016 election.

  • Harvard’s Glaeser welcomes global shift to cities

    City of Boston official Brian Golden joined Professor Edward Glaeser at the Ed Portal for a discussion focused on the future of cities.

  • Local teachers get an education in addressing hard questions

    To help give local educators the capacity to bring thoughtful ideas back to their communities, two students at the Harvard Graduate School of Education recently offered a program on race and equity in education.

  • Speaking up, reaching out

    Lawyer and then-professor of law at Ambo University, Zelalem Kibret first visited a jailed politician in Ethiopia’s infamous Kaliti Prison in 2012, hoping to raise awareness about people arrested for challenging the status quo. In 2014, Zelalem found himself behind bars for speaking up.

  • Making soccer everyone’s game

    A three-day symposium hosted by Harvard’s Weatherhead Initiative on Global History, titled “Participation, Inclusion and Social Responsibility in Global Sports,” probed issues of racism and inclusion.

  • The right footprints

    Gabrielle Scrimshaw ’18 is a Gleitsman Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School. The first in her family to attend college, she plans to start an investment firm for tribal businesses and indigenous entrepreneurs.

    Gabrielle Scrimshaw, Gleitsman Fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School
  • Paramedic to Prague to Harvard

    Oren Varnai, graduating from the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s mid-career master of public health program, is a Foreign Service officer in Prague.

  • The Civil Rights lawyer who paved the path

    On the anniversary of Brown v. Board of Education, the Gazette sat down with Tomiko Brown-Nagin, the faculty director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice, to talk about Houston, architect of the legal campaign that led to the 1954 landmark Supreme Court ruling that ended legal segregation in public schools.

    Tomiko Brown-Nagin.
  • The doctor gets a doctorate

    Neither Wirun Limsawart’s knowledge as a doctor nor his work as a hospital manager could help him solve Thailand’s national crisis over health care malpractice.

  • Time off from Harvard helped her thrive

    Jee always knew she would take time off from her studies. What she didn’t know was how her time away from Cambridge would help her “fall back in love with Harvard,” and define her future path.

  • Her app for a socio-medical goal: Anthropology without borders

    Margot Mai ’18 came to Harvard to pursue biology and pre-med, only to discover anthropology and change her concentration in her sophomore year.

  • Assessing the Iran deal pullout

    Faculty and affiliates of the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs at Harvard Kennedy School weighed in on President Donald Trump’s decision to pull out the United States from the multi-lateral Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, the Iran nuclear deal.

    President Trump at podium.
  • From federal support, groundbreaking research

    Latest federal budget allocations allow Harvard scientists to push toward fresh discoveries.

    lab
  • John McCain: A maverick who matters

    Harvard analysts reflect on the life and legacy of ailing Arizona Sen. John McCain, who says in a new memoir that this will be his last term in office.

    Sen. John McCain.
  • A historic summit, with uncertain outcome

    John Park, director of the Belfer Center’s Korea Working Group at Harvard Kennedy School, discusses the prospects for lasting peace between South Korea and North Korea following the historic announcement of their intent to sign a peace treaty to end the Korean War.

  • Debating markets and morals in Moscow

    About 1,500 Russian students recently packed a historic building adjacent to the Kremlin for a lecture and public discussion led by Harvard Professor Michael Sandel on ethics, markets, and democracy.

    Michael Sandel in Russia