Nation & World

All Nation & World

  • On the road to impeachment?

    Harvard faculty react to the opening of an impeachment inquiry into President Trump by the House of Representatives and discuss what it may mean for the country.

    Nancy Pelosi
  • Change is collective

    Sarah Lockridge-Steckel is co-founder and CEO of The Collective, a nonprofit organization that provides pathways to opportunities for young adults through partnerships with education institutions and employers in her hometown of Memphis, Tennessee.

    Sarah and a Collective member laughing at a table
  • National parks’ economic benefits put at over $100B annually

    A new economic analysis of the U.S. National Park system puts its value to Americans at more than $100 billion, a figure that dwarfs the financially strapped agency’s $2.5 billion budget and underpins a call to change how what has been called “America’s Best Idea” is financed.

    Glacier Point at Yosemite National Park.
  • An ounce of prevention

    Jim Langford is the president of the Georgia Prevention Project, the MillionMile Greenway, and the Coosawattee Foundation. For the past decade he has been raising awareness about the rising drug epidemic in his state.

    Jim in front of a barn with a jacket on
  • Emerald city

    Alexis Wheeler founded the Harvard Club of Seattle Crimson Achievement Program (CAP) to help illuminate the path to college for high-potential high school students from Western Washington school districts that serve predominantly low-income populations.

    Alexis perched on a boulder with rugged mountains in the background; Seattle cityscape; CAP students studying
  • Mail priorities

    Madelyn Petersen explored her passions for business and human rights and community lawyering at Harvard Law School. She is currently interning with the Corporate Accountability Lab in Chicago before starting a clerkship with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida.

    Madelyn standing in front of a whiteboard during a legal design workshop; Iowa statehood commemorative stamp; a row of mailboxes in rural Iowa
  • Improving the odds

    Erica Mosca founded Leaders in Training (LIT) in 2012, an organization that helps prospective first-generation college students from East Las Vegas high schools finish their degrees and work toward becoming leaders in their home state. She is herself a first-generation college graduate and a social justice advocate.

  • Leading the fight for food justice

    Food justice activist and author of “Farming While Black” Leah Penniman spoke of the barriers faced by young people of color who are drawn to farming.

    Food activistFood activist, Leah Penniman Leah Penniman
  • On climate, the young take the lead

    Impacts of climate change and fossil fuel burning can be particularly dire for the vulnerable, like the planet’s youth, who are watching out for their interests by staging a global climate strike, according to C-Change’s Aaron Bernstein.

    Aaron Bernstein standing in front of art
  • Houston, we have a solution

    Anne Sung is a native of Houston and a graduate of the city’s public schools. Since 2016 she has served as a trustee of the Houston Independent School District. She is also a public school educator, advocate, and strategist.

    A collage of photos, including Anne with kids, Houston skyline, and kids walking across a street
  • Tillerson’s exit interview

    Former Secretary of State Rex Tillerson offered his take on global leaders and hotspots, from Iran and Saudi Arabia to North Korea and Syria and discussed diplomacy negotiation strategies during a closed-door talk for the American Secretaries of State project at Harvard Kennedy School Tuesday.

    Tillerson panel
  • Magnolia state blooming

    Emily Broad Leib is an assistant clinical professor of law, director of the Harvard Law School Food Law and Policy Clinic, and deputy director of the Harvard Law School Center for Health Law and Policy Innovation. As founder of the Harvard Law School Food Law and Policy Clinic, Broad Leib launched the first law school clinic in the nation devoted to providing clients with legal and policy solutions to address the health, economic, and environmental challenges facing our food system.

  • United front

    Rye Barcott is a U.S. Marine Corps veteran living in North Carolina. He is the co-founder and CEO of With Honor, a group that aims to bridge partisanship in U.S. politics by supporting veterans running for office.

    A collage of pictures, with the staff of With Honor, a capital building, and a map of Carlotte
  • On the Brexit hot seat

    On Monday the man who has emerged as a celebrity of the Brexit debate, Speaker of the House of Commons John Bercow, came to campus during a brief break from his duty as official referee of the popularly elected legislative body.

    John Bercow
  • Lights, camera, access

    Brickson Diamond is the co-founder of Blackhouse, a foundation that helps black writers, producers, directors, and executives gain a better foothold in the film and television industries.

    Brickson looking up at a modern art structure
  • Seeds of change

    Benet Magnuson is a native Kansan and the executive director of Kansas Appleseed. His career has been dedicated to nonprofit advocacy on behalf of impoverished and excluded communities.

    Benet speaking at a podium
  • Growing home

    Izzy Goodchild-Michelman is a South Carolina native who spent six weeks working for Hub City Urban Farm in Spartanburg, S.C., before she started at Harvard. She helped write grants and revamped the educational Seed to Table curriculum that’s used with elementary and middle school students.

    A collage of photos of Izzy working on the farm
  • New report urges Congress to close its growing tech gap

    Harvard Kennedy School researchers release report urging Congress to close its growing tech-knowledge gap.

    Congress
  • Symposium celebrates career of William Julius Wilson

    Symposium celebrates career of William Julius Wilson.

    William Julius Wilson
  • Humanizing global problems

    Samantha Power says the desire to make positive change springs from understanding our connections as people.

    Samantha Power
  • Like a fish out of a war zone

    An excerpt from “The Education of an Idealist: A Memoir” by Samantha Power.

    Samantha Power interviewing Bosnian military
  • Amazon blazes could speed climate change

    Harvard biologist and longtime Amazon rainforest researcher Brian Farrell discusses how the forest fires raging in Brazil are threatening the planet’s climate, and how to stop them.

    Fire in the Amazon
  • Searching for deeper learning

    An interview with HGSE professor Jal Mehta about the book “In Search of Deeper Learning” he co-authored with Sarah Fine, Ed.M. ’13, Ed.D. ’17. The book examines the American high school and where students are experiencing deeper learning, which involves engagement, joy, and a sense of community.

    Jal Mehta.
  • Want to stop mass shootings?

    In the wake of mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio, the Gazette spoke with David Hemenway, professor of health policy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center, and author of the 2006 book “Private Guns, Public Health.” Hemenway has spent much of his career studying gun violence.

    Woman mourns at memorial
  • Given support and a choice, families move to where children do best

    A collaboration between Harvard’s Opportunity Insights and public housing agencies in Washington state found that giving support and advice about housing options to families with housing choice vouchers led to significantly more of them moving to areas where children have higher recorded rates of upward mobility.

    Child on swing
  • Digging up the past

    Harvard archaeology Professor Matthew Liebmann sat down with the Gazette to talk about his research, how his field has reckoned with the past, and how both influence his teaching.

    Matt Liebmann
  • No visible bruises

    Rachel Louise Snyder spoke with Diane Rosenfeld, a lecturer and director of the Gender Violence Program at Harvard Law School, about her book “No Visible Bruises: What We Don’t Know About Domestic Abuse Can Kill Us.”

    broken glass
  • Portrait of the revolutionary as a young man

    Jonathan M. Hansen’s biography of Fidel Castro’s early years aims to “get past the demonization and celebration and recover the complex person in the middle.”

    Young Fidel Castro in 1957.
  • Message in the dust

    An unusual find during a Harvard Summer School program archaeological dig teaches students the fundamentals at one of Peru’s most important sites.

  • Bacow sits down with lawmakers

    Larry Bacow visited the nation’s capital this week to meet with members of Congress to discuss a range of University priorities, including the effects of federal immigration policy on faculty and students at Harvard and at universities across the nation. The visit comes on the heels of a letter Bacow sent to Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and Acting Secretary of Homeland Security Kevin McAleenan last week urging them to expedite the visa and immigration process for foreign students and researchers.

    Harvard President Larry Bacow speaking in Washington, D.C.