This history course in which students students study Civil Rights-era images as artifacts, as part of archives, and pathways to visibility, solidarity, and justice.
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This course, a standard offering for business schools, has been in Haverford’s catalog for years, but now, as part of our partnership with Claremont McKenna’s Master of Finance program, it is now offered bi-annually.
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This survey of revolutionary developments in neuroscience included class visits by current leaders in the field and student trips to the Franklin Institute in Philadelphia to visit the most complex piece of brain art in the world.
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Highlighting faculty professional activities, including conferences, exhibitions, performances, awards, and publications.
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Before Monday’s on-campus concert by the Network for New Music Ensemble, the ensemble’s performers played some pieces written by students in Ingrid Arauco’s composition course.
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This writing seminar considers the way food practices and the discourses that surround them can unite families, consolidate ethnic identity, reinforce class boundaries, and even express gender.
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The Los Angeles Times Book Award-winning poet gave a well-attended reading in Magill Library.
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At a “Park Street Finance” event, part of the Impact Investing Speaker Series, panelists discussed role of financial operations in community building.
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Professor of Physics Suzanne Amador Kane used a headcam on a goshawk to learn how it searches for its prey.
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This year, Israel Burshatin’s comparative literature course on the dissenting voices of gender and sexuality in Spain and Spanish America is buoyed by a related exhibition in Magill Library around the Inquisition trial of a F-to-M trans surgeon born into slavery.
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This introductory course in environmental studies is team taught by faculty from different disciplines and uses case studies as the basis for its exploration of contemporary and historical environmental issues.
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As part of an interdisciplinary, multi-institutional team, the assistant professor of biology published a paper in Nature Geoscience about the implications of the ancient CO2 record for future climate change.
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This curatorial seminar examines the revolutionary transformation of Japanese artistic production and exhibition practice from the late 19th century through the present day.
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This new course (taught by the new director of the visual studies program) introduces students to key issues in this interdisciplinary field.
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The assistant professor of computer science was awarded $172,742 as part of a larger collaborative grant to further work on algorithmic fairness and bias.