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    Business opportunities from climate change

    Thanks to greenhouse gases, the Earth’s climate is changing. One of the main sources of these gases is business. However, business is also the main source of new products, services, and business models that may save us from wholesale climate calamity. But what are businesses doing to address climate change? What can — and should…

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    Why black women face a high risk of pregnancy complications

    Black women are three to four times more likely to die from pregnancy-related complications than white women, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention—and a big reason for the disparity may be racism, say experts. “It’s basically a public health and human rights emergency because it’s been estimated that a significant portion of…

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    Arboretum’s Dosmann receives horticulture award

    Michael S. Dosmann, Keeper of the Living Collections at the Arnold Arboretum of Harvard University, was recently named the 2019 recipient of the David Fairchild Medal for Plant Exploration in recognition of his outstanding contributions to botanical exploration and horticulture. Awarded by the National Tropical Botanical Garden (NTBG), the Fairchild Medal was presented to Dosmann at…

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    Divinity School writer-in-residence wins book award

    The Los Angeles Times announced Feb. 21 that one of its prestigious book prizes will be presented to Terry Tempest Williams, Harvard Divinity School’s (HDS) writer-in-residence. According to the Times, Williams will receive the Robert Kirsch Award, a lifetime achievement prize “given to a writer with a substantial connection to the American West.” Williams has been called “a…

    Terry Tempest Williams stands with hands clasped in front of a tree.
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    Faculty Council meeting — Feb. 13, 2019

    On Feb. 13 the Faculty Council heard updates on the quantitative reasoning requirement and on course registration. The Council next meets on Feb. 27. The preliminary deadline for the March 5 meeting of the Faculty is Feb. 19 at noon.

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    Making cities bike friendly for all

    Across the U.S., bicycling rates are on the rise among low-income residents and people of color. But cycling infrastructure in cities, such as dedicated bike lanes, are often lacking in low-income or minority neighborhoods, and riders there a face higher risk of accidents and crashes. A new study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public…

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    Sheffield named chief development officer at Art Museums

    The Harvard Art Museums are pleased to announce the appointment of Melanie Sheffield as chief development officer, a new leadership position in the museums’ Office of Institutional Advancement; she will assume the role on March 4, 2019. The chief development officer will provide strategic direction for the planning and execution of all functions related to…

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    Ash Center ranked top think tank

    The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation, a research center at Harvard Kennedy School, was rated a top university-affiliated think tank and listed as one of the best transparency and good governance think tanks in the latest edition of the “Global Go To Think Tank Index Report.” The index, produced annually by James McGann,…

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    Reliance on coal linked with lung cancer

    The more a country relies on coal-fired power plants to generate energy, the greater the lung cancer risk is among its citizens, according to a new study from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The study was published on Jan. 28, 2019 in the journal Environmental Health. Most estimates of health risks from coal-fired…

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    Memorial Church collection aids youth homeless shelter

    The 109th annual Christmas Carol Service raised more than $13,000 for Y2Y Harvard Square, a youth homeless shelter founded and run by Harvard students. The annual carol service in the sanctuary of the Memorial Church is the oldest carol service in the nation. Each year, donations are taken at the end of each of two services…

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    Climate change exhibit spotlights need for global preparedness

    The Harvard Museum of Natural History (HMNH) announced the new Climate Change exhibit that draws on the latest scientific information about our warming climate, the global and local consequences, and how to both reduce the fossil fuel emissions that cause it and prepare for its effects. Developed in collaboration with the Harvard University Center for…

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    An unexpected link between marijuana and fertility

    Men who have smoked marijuana at some point in their life had significantly higher concentrations of sperm when compared with men who have never smoked marijuana, according to new research led by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. The study, conducted in the Fertility Clinic at Massachusetts General Hospital, also found that there was…

    A marijuana plant
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    Ash Center launches Innovation Field Lab New York

    The Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation today announced the launch of the Innovation Field Lab New York, a new two-year program comprising data-driven experimentation and real-time policy innovation to improve neighborhoods in 10 cities in the state of New York. The program supports city leaders through data-analytic support, applied research, and executive education…

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    Managerial lessons from fired football coaches

    Six National Football League head coaches were fired on Dec. 31, or “Black Monday,” as it’s known in the sport. The infamous tradition begins immediately after the conclusion of each NFL regular season and represents efforts by underperforming teams to make leadership changes. This story is not unique to sports, of course. Based on surveys with executives…

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    Faculty Council meeting — Jan. 30, 2019

    On Jan. 30 the Faculty Council approved a proposal to dissolve the Standing Committee on the Library. They also approved proposals regarding concurrent master’s degrees for undergraduates and the name of the Department of Visual and Environmental Studies. The Council next meets on Feb. 13. The next meeting of the Faculty is on Feb. 5.…

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    The business case for supporting caregiving employees

    Companies are facing a growing yet largely undetected threat to their worker productivity, employee retention, and competitive advantage: the needs of employees who are caregivers. The aging population, an increasingly female workforce, and the tightest job market in half a century make supporting caregivers a critical talent management issue, according to the new report, “The…

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    To stop colon cancer, new study looks at microbiome

    The burden of colorectal cancer is staggering. In 2018, it was the third-most commonly diagnosed cancer among both men and women in the U.S., and data indicate that younger adults are increasingly being diagnosed with it. To help develop new treatments and preventive measures to stop the disease, Cancer Research UK has awarded roughly $26…

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    Harvard Choir takes American choral music on UK tour

    The Harvard University Choir is taking its brand of American choral music to Britain, the cradle and keeper of a rich Christian choral tradition. The choir is scheduled to depart Boston on Sunday for a week-long tour of performances at several of England’s most prestigious university chapels and London-area cathedrals. The tour includes concerts at…

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    Physician burnout declared a public health crisis

    Burnout among the nation’s physicians has become so pervasive that a new paper published today by the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, the Harvard Global Health Institute, the Massachusetts Medical Society, and the Massachusetts Health and Hospital Association (MHA) has deemed the condition a public health crisis. The paper includes directives aimed toward…

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    Knitting for a good cause

    The strains of Bach, Stravinsky, and jazz aren’t the only sounds coming from the Music Department and the Eda Kuhn Loeb Music Library lately.  On most Friday afternoons the sound of knitting needles and can be heard clattering away. The weekly knitting circle, currently composed of graduate students, staff, and anyone affiliated with the department…

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    To hope as Martin Luther King Jr. hoped

    Martin Luther King Jr. would have turned 90 this year. While his name and his contribution to the U.S. Civil Rights Movement are revered, some wonder if King’s legacy is in jeopardy amid a resurgence of racism, xenophobia, and hate crimes in the United States. Moreover, while the African-American church was the foundation for King’s activism and organizing,…

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    From spreadsheets to city streets

    In two recently released papers, a pair of scholars affiliated with Harvard Kennedy School’s Ash Center for Democratic Governance and Innovation take a close look at how urban leaders are grappling with the quick pace of technological and regulatory change in America’s cities today. In “Reforming Mobility Management: Rethinking the Regulatory Framework,” Stephen Goldsmith, Daniel Paul…

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    Week-long training inspires Harvard’s dining team

    Harvard’s students were still on break, but from Jan. 7-11, class was in session. Harvard University Dining Services (HUDS) took advantage of a rare downtime on campus to host 226 hourly employees and 44 managers for a first-of-its-kind week-long training. “We’re a large department,” noted David Davidson, managing director for HUDS, “and also an extremely busy…

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    Rise in medical marketing poses challenges

    Companies spent nearly $10 billion to market prescription drugs and medical services in 2016 — five times more than they spent 20 years ago, according to a new study. The large increase in “medical marketing” includes ads directed at consumers for prescription drugs, treatments, tests, or hospital services, as well as pitches to doctors by…

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    Lead levels too high in many U.S. schools

    Millions of children could be getting too much lead in the water they drink at school, according to a new report from Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and the Nutrition Policy Institute at the University of California. More than 40 percent of schools around the country appear to have higher-than-recommended levels of lead in…

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    Swapping sweeteners may reduce disease risk — but water is better

    Sugar substitutes such as aspartame and stevia may not help people lose weight, according to a review carried out for the World Health Organization by Cochrane, a nonprofit research group. The review did not find any solid evidence of either health benefits or risks from non-sugar sweeteners (NSSs), but the studies they looked at were…

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    A decades-long legacy of protecting workers’ health

    When Alice Hamilton joined Harvard’s faculty in 1919, workplace hazards were plentiful. American manufacturing was on the rise and across the country scores of workers were regularly exposed to myriad toxins, including lead, mercury, and asbestos to name just a few. Hamilton knew the risks workers faced perhaps better than anyone at the time. Prior…

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    New poll shows shift in Americans’ priorities

    Lowering drug prices, cutting the federal budget deficit, and stanching the rise of domestic hate crimes are among the top issues that Americans want Congress to tackle in 2019, according to a new poll conducted by Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health and Politico. The poll surveyed 1,014 adults in early December, and found…

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    Faculty chair of Advanced Leadership Initiative welcomes record-breaking cohort

    The new faculty chair of Harvard’s Advanced Leadership Initiative (ALI) announced the selection of 48 ALI Fellows and 20 ALI Partners to take part in its intensive, multi-disciplinary fellowship program. Meredith B. Rosenthal, faculty chair for ALI and C. Boyden Gray Professor of the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, noted that this was…

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    Cooper Gallery and Busch-Reisinger Museum among best exhibitions in U.S.

    “Inventur—Art in Germany, 1943–55” at the Harvard Art Museums and “Nine Moments for Now” at the Cooper Gallery were both among Hyperallergic’s top 20 exhibitions across the United States this year. Hyperallergic, which promotes itself as a forum for playful, serious, and radical perspectives on art and culture, said that this year’s best exhibitions focused on visualizing identity…