Nation & World

All Nation & World

  • Once the honeymoon is over

    “What Should We Do After ‘I Do’?: Conversations on the Challenges that Remain for the LGBTQ Community” focused on the future of a diverse movement. The conference was co-sponsored by the Harvard Gender & Sexuality Caucus and the Harvard Alumni Association.

  • Matching policy to power of addiction

    The crisis in heroin addiction has mobilized law enforcement, public health officials, and scholars to push for substantial changes to drug policy.

  • The spirituality of Africa

    Though larger religions have made big inroads, African spirituality, a belief system based in openness and adaptation, endures, says Harvard religion professor Jacob Olupona.

  • Inside the Iran nuclear deal

    Former Ambassador Wendy Sherman, who led the U.S. negotiating team that struck the landmark nuclear agreement with Iran, reflects on her work and what it takes to succeed in the field of high-stakes diplomacy.

  • Conflict escalation

    Retired Brigadier Gen. Kevin Ryan, now at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs, assesses the implications of Russia’s incursion into Syria.

  • The state of the podcast

    The podcast, an Internet technology that had its genesis at Harvard, roars back to prominence.

  • After Boehner

    Douglas Heye, a former top communications official with the GOP and now a fall fellow at the Harvard Kennedy School’s Institute of Politics, discusses the turmoil within the Republican Party following House Speaker John Boehner’s abrupt retirement announcement.

  • Doctors in a hard place

    Increasingly, says a report by Harvard Law School’s Program on International Law and Armed Conflict, doctors can be charged for giving medical care to alleged terrorists.

  • Europe’s crisis of conscience

    Panelists discuss the ongoing humanitarian crisis as millions of Syrian refugees fleeing civil war find disparate receptions in European nations.

  • The last companions

    A Harvard Divinity School program helps teach chaplains how to befriend and comfort the sick and the dying.

  • What ‘The Prize’ taught Newark, and its author

    Harvard EdCast interviews Dale Russakoff, author of “The Prize.” The Washington Post reporter, who looked at the troubled education reform story of Newark, N.J., reflected on what can be learned from its failure to provide system-wide reform.

  • Measuring assimilation

    U.S. immigrants today are assimilating as quickly or quicker than past generations of immigrants, according to a study by the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine.

  • Pope brings ‘Francis effect’ to U.S.

    Harvard Divinity School faculty will attend two of Pope Francis’ stops during his six-day visit to the United States Sept. 22-27.

  • Learning about learning: Creating a connection

    A newly integrated HarvardX and HILT research effort will probe residential and online learning, and the places in between.

  • MOOCs on the move

    As MOOCs grow in influence and sophistication, they’re no longer simply reimagined in a Harvard classroom or even in a nearby studio. Recently, transforming a residential course — going digital via HarvardX — included filming in far-flung Rwanda and Haiti.

  • That first draft of history

    Longtime CBS News reporter and now Shorenstein Center Fellow Bob Schieffer reflects on his 50-year career covering politics.

  • Straight dealing

    As Congress prepares to vote on a deal to limit Iran’s nuclear program, Harvard Kennedy School experts consider its merits and shortcomings and look to what’s next.

  • The Venice connection

    Collaborative summer study program between Harvard and Venetian university marks its 10th year.

  • China syndrome

    HBS’ Dante Roscini explains China’s stock market crash and how investors worldwide are recalibrating the country’s once go-go future.

  • In Peru, progress against TB

    A branch of Partners In Health in Peru has reduced the number of deaths from multidrug-resistant TB through a system of careful protocols.

  • The maturing of MOOCs

    In a question-and-answer session, the researchers behind the edX platform reflect on the risks, rewards, and changes in online learning.

  • Study identifies new cheating method in MOOCs

    Researchers from MIT and Harvard have identified a new cheating method in MOOCs, and they suggest how to protect course certification.

  • Airing it out

    Harvard Law School’s Peter Carfagna breaks down the seemingly endless, ongoing legal battle over deflated NFL footballs.

  • A hard look at war’s reparations

    A Harvard study of Colombia’s civil war reparations program says it is the largest of its kind and well-received by the population, but may be too big for its own good.

  • Iran steps back

    Matthew Bunn, a nuclear policy expert at the Harvard Kennedy School, evaluates the restrictive nuclear deal announced between Iran and a U.S.-led coalition.

  • ‘One for the ages’

    The landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision upholding gay marriage nationally is “one for the ages,” a Harvard legal analyst said, a judgment echoed by others.

  • New face for the $10 bill

    Three Harvard scholars talk about the role of symbolism in the announcement that a woman will replace Alexander Hamilton on the $10 bill.

  • The art of political persuasion

    New political science research says that, contrary to conventional wisdom, political attitudes are a consequence of political actions, rather than their cause.

  • A blessing to slow climate change

    Scholars in theology, policy, and science weigh in on the pope’s call for sweeping action against climate change.

  • Insights on where we learn

    Four-day Harvard conference focuses on academic spaces, and how to improve them.