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FAS professor awarded France’s Légion d’honneur
Susan Rubin Suleiman, Ph.D., A.M., A.B., has won many awards over her storied career as an educator and writer, but was recently awarded Légion d’honneur, France’s highest decoration, a particularly poignant recognition of her work and personal connection to France and its people. Her fascination with France began as a child, later informing her studies as…

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Women pay higher career price in today’s work culture
Top leaders of a global consulting firm longed to add more women to its partner ranks, if women would just put in the hours necessary to compete. But mothers would always prioritize their children’s needs over those of clients, they reasoned. There was probably nothing they could do to change that. Even so, the executives…

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A.R.T. gala raises $1.4M for artistic, community programs
The American Repertory Theater (A.R.T.) at Harvard University, under the leadership of Terrie and Bradley Bloom Artistic Director Diane Paulus and Executive Producer Diane Borger, raised a record $1.4 million in support of the theater’s artistic, community, and education programs at its annual fundraising gala held April 1. More than 500 guests attended the event at the Boch Center Wang Theatre that celebrated…

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Research conference celebrates socially engaged scholarship
On April 4 and 5, Harvard students, faculty, and staff, along with nearly 40 undergraduate students from across the country, will meet for the 2019 Engaged Scholarship & Social Justice Undergraduate Research Conference (ESSJ). The conference is free and open to the public. All sessions will be held at the Student Organization Center at Hilles.…

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Vision & Justice: A creative convening on art, race, and equity
Harvard University’s Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study will host Vision & Justice, a landmark two-day creative convening that will explore the role of the arts in the construction of citizenship, race, and justice. The Vision & Justice program, which will take place on April 25-26, features luminaries in the fields of music, photography, film, and…

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Clinicians, public health experts should focus on helping people flourish, article says
Clinicians and public health practitioners should start considering the concept of flourishing when examining patients and assessing population-level health trends, according to a new Viewpoint article in JAMA, authored by Tyler VanderWeele, Ph.D. (Human Flourishing Program — Harvard), Eileen McNeely, Ph.D. (SHINE — Harvard), and Howard K. Koh, M.D., M.P.H. (Culture of Health — Harvard). It…

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Advanced Leadership Initiative hosts Climate Change Deep Dive
It takes transformational leadership to inspire individuals to sacrifice the comforts of the here and now for the benefits of the there and then. That was the central message of the Harvard Advanced Leadership Initiative’s (ALI) 2019 Climate Change Deep Dive. The event provided ALI Fellows an in-depth view of the complexities and opportunities surrounding…

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Public health through economic opportunity
Leadership requires vision. The idea itself is not new, but as circumstances change, so, too, does the vision required. Former Delaware Governor Jack Markell summed up this idea in a recent visit to the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “It is very important that everybody who’s in an executive leadership position in government…

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Faculty Council meeting — March 27, 2019
On March 27 the Faculty Council approved proposals to establish a master’s degree in biotechnology and to establish a quantitative reasoning with data requirement. They also approved a proposal on course registration and heard an update regarding graduate student unionization. The Council next meets on April 10. The next meeting of the Faculty is on…
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Experts warn against EPA proposal to limit evidence review
Proposed changes in how the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) assesses the health risks of fine particulate matter, a form of air pollution that has been linked to an array of diseases, would significantly undermine the agency’s ability to protect the public from air pollution, according to a new paper in Science co-authored by Francesca Dominici,…

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Divinity School’s executive education program all about ‘Making Change’
When we look at the way we live on our planet, there are ethical issues all around us: racism, inequality, migration, conflict and peace. To examine these issues, Harvard Divinity School has created a very different kind of executive education program, designed around personal development, to give leaders the resources they need to be agents…

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Can vaccines help fight the rise of drug-resistant microbes?
Some of the most important medications doctors have at their disposal have been rendered ineffective by parasites, viruses, and bacteria that have evolved resistance against them, and the problem is poised to get worse. Drug-resistant strains of gonorrhea, salmonella, Escherichia coli (E. coli), and many other disease-causing agents are flourishing around the world, and the…

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Asia Center’s exhibition explores art, disability, and mental health
Harvard’s first exhibition of works produced in art workshops for people with disabilities (and only the second devoted to self-taught artists) “Eye Eye Nose Mouth: Art, Disability, and Mental Illness in Shiga-ken, Japan, and Nanjing, China” opened last month at the Harvard Asia Center (CGIS South Concourse). In preparation for the exhibition, co-curators Raphael Koenig…

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OTD launches Experts-in-Residence program
Harvard’s Office of Technology Development (OTD) has launched an Experts-in-Residence (XIR) program, creating a powerful new resource for Harvard faculty and researchers to accelerate startup formation and support the commercialization of University innovations. Initially, 28 XIR have volunteered for the program. Experts include partners at venture capital firms, scientific entrepreneurs, research and development (R&D) executives,…

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Dallas Morning News reporters recognized with Goldsmith Award
The 2019 Goldsmith Prize for Investigative Reporting was awarded Tuesday to J. David McSwane and Andrew Chavez of the Dallas Morning News, for their series “Pain and Profit.” In reporting “Pain and Profit” the Dallas Morning News found that thousands of sick and disabled Texans were being denied life-sustaining drugs and treatments by the private…

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Faculty Council meeting — March 13, 2019
On March 13 the Faculty Council heard a proposal to establish a master’s degree in biotechnology. They also heard proposals on course registration and on a quantitative reasoning with data requirement. The Council next meets on March 27. The preliminary deadline for the April 2 meeting of the Faculty is March 19 at noon.
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Home remodeling on the upswing
The home remodeling market in the U.S. expanded by more than 50 percent since the end of the Great Recession, according to Improving America’s Housing 2019, a new report released March 12 by the Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies. The 20th anniversary report in the series produced biennially by the center’s Remodeling Futures Program…

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Lewis appointed to HMC board of directors
On March 12, Harvard Management Company (HMC) announced that William (Bill) M. Lewis Jr. ’78, M.B.A. ’82 has been elected to serve on the company’s board of directors. Lewis is currently a managing director and co-chairman of investment banking at Lazard Ltd., a global investment bank and financial advisory company. Before joining Lazard in 2004,…

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Leading with latitude
Democrats and Republicans are more divided today than at almost any other time in United States history. According to a 2018 survey, when asked to describe members of the opposite political party, 61 percent of Democrats described Republicans as racist, bigoted, and/or sexist, and 49 percent of Republicans described Democrats as ignorant. These statistics capture the underlying tension between the…

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How to talk to a climate skeptic
If you’re talking to a person who’s skeptical about climate change, should you argue with them about scientific evidence? Maybe not, says Aaron Bernstein, co-director of the Center for Climate, Health, and the Global Environment (C-CHANGE) at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. It may be more productive to talk with them about a…

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Pooling doctors’ diagnoses could improve accuracy
It’s estimated that about 12 million people in the U.S. are misdiagnosed in outpatient care every year. And that’s a very conservative estimate, according to Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s Michael Barnett. Now, a new study led by Barnett, assistant professor of health policy and management, suggests that pooling the diagnoses of multiple…

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Study finds HIPAA protected data still at risks
The research paper titled “Risks to Patient Privacy: A Re-identification of Patients in Maine and Vermont Statewide Hospital Data,” reveals that patients’ personal records in hospitals can still be re-identified even when data identifiers such as names and addresses were removed to follow the HIPAA Safe Harbor de-identification guidelines. The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability…

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Esperanza Spalding harmonizes art and public health
Using artistic tools like music, storytelling, photos, and multimedia could be a powerful way to promote healing as well as social justice. That was the message at a recent Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health event that featured Esperanza Spalding, a Grammy-winning jazz bassist, vocalist, and composer and a professor of practice in Harvard…

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John Palfrey to lead MacArthur Foundation
John Palfrey ’94, J.D. ’01, a respected educator, author, legal scholar, and innovator with expertise in how new media is changing learning, education, and other institutions, will serve as the sixth president of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, effective Sept. 1, MacArthur Board Chairman Dan Huttenlocher announced March 5. Since 2012, Palfrey…

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Threat sensors: the neurons that regulate fear response
Walking down a dark alley, you might quicken your pace or even break out into a run — even if there is nothing there to harm you. Your instinct to flee is based on an ambiguous threat in your environment. But what part of your brain controls that response? How are those nebulous feelings relayed…

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Black entrepreneurs in the spotlight
Many years before Uber and Lyft, there were jitney cabs: ride-share services created by and for black Americans discriminated against by taxi companies. It was a business idea that originated in the black community, as well as an innovation in the marketplace. It’s also just one example of a successful black industry excluded from the…

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Nearly half of childhood cancers worldwide undiagnosed
Nearly half of all childhood cancers are not being diagnosed globally, according to a new modeling study led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The study found that, in 2015, there were 397,000 cases of childhood cancer worldwide, but only 224,000 were diagnosed. And if health systems around the world don’t improve, the…

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Food Forward at Harvard
On Feb. 7 and 8, Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS) hosted a delegation of 20 guests from China in a cultural and culinary exchange called Food Forward, focused on sharing strategies and best practices for collegiate dining programs around nutritious and sustainable menus. During the two days, eight chefs and a dozen educators and advocates…

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What will it take to turn a profit in space?
As entrepreneurial rocket companies come closer to shooting the first space tourist into the void, perhaps even this year, another reality is dawning: It’s tough to launch. Up until now, companies competing in the commercial space race have been blessed somewhat by the glamour of it all. Investors enthusiastically, maybe too much so, backed a…

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Santos to deliver Kennedy School graduation address
Juan Manuel Santos, the former president of the Republic of Colombia and Nobel laureate, will deliver the graduation address to the Harvard Kennedy School Class of 2019, Dean Douglas Elmendorf announced today. Santos served as president of the Republic of Colombia from 2010 to 2018. While president, he reached agreement with FARC, a guerilla army,…
