Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University

In the News

Harvard Gazette, October 23, 2012
[Photo by Rose Lincoln]

Haiti had been cholera-free for 100 years before the 2010 earthquake. At a recent Radcliffe Water Lecture, Harvard's John Mekalanos said, “The most likely conclusion is cholera was introduced in Haiti by a human.” 

Her Raven Domain: Author Christine Frost's Blog, October 21, 2012

Blogger Christine Frost attended Radcliffe's lecture and 20 questions with Roger Chartier and writes, "The Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study has become an amazing place. It serves as a hub for collaborative projects that span Harvard University, and all disciplines, from humanities to the sciences, are explored in a variety of symposia and events." 

Slate, October 19, 2012
[Photograph by David Shankbone/Wikimedia Commons]

The Radcliffe Institute's Annette Gordon-Reed reviews Henry Wiencek's Master of the Mountain: Thomas Jefferson and His Slaves, a new examination of Thomas Jefferson and slavery. 

Harvard Gazette, October 17, 2012
[Photo by Kris Snibbe]

The future of water symposium featured a variety of water-centric issues, from desalination to pollutants to the dangers of contamination from hydraulic fracturing. Radcliffe Dean Cohen said that water issues reach across disciplines, making them good subjects for the science symposium, which seeks to stimulate interdisciplinary conversation and collaboration.

Harvard Gazette, October 16, 2012
[Photo by Kris Snibbe]

While a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute, I. Glenn Cohen is writing a book about the growing phenomenon of medical tourism, the practice of citizens of one country traveling to seek medical care in another country. He examines the emerging legal and ethical issues brought up by the many varieties of medical tourism.

Harvard Crimson, October 16, 2012

Lizabeth Cohen, the recently inaugurated dean of the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, brought a multi-faceted lens to the problem of integration in post-World War II urban America in a speech called "Place, People, and Power"—an aptly all-encompassing name for a wide-ranging talk.

@ The Radcliffe Institute, October 15, 2012
[President Drew Gilpin Faust and Dean Lizabeth Cohen Photo by Tony Rinaldo]

Harvard President Faust introduced Dean Cohen for her inaugural lecture—Place, People, and Power: City Building in Postwar America—stating, “Liz Cohen has crossed traditional disciplinary boundaries in ways that have brought fresh insight to some of the most important issues of our time.”

Harvard Gazette, October 5, 2012
[Photo by Stephanie Mitchell]

Lizabeth Cohen, a professor of American studies and Radcliffe's new dean, took a break from working on her inaugural lecture to talk with the Gazette about learning on the job, embracing the arts, setting goals, and more.

Bay State Banner, October 4, 2012
[Photo by Paul Child, Courtesy Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University]]

The Bay State Banner reports the symposium honoring the centenary of Child's birth offered a day-long sampling of Child fervor, drawing an overflow audience as well as Internet viewers. In Cambridge, as on TV, Child was disarmingly natural and free of pretension, engaging and curious, whether shopping for cheese or meats or chatting with nearby ladies at her hair salon.

Harvard Magazine, October 2, 2012

The MacArthur Foundation awarded its $500,000, no-strings-attached fellowships, known as "genius grants," on October 1. Former Radcliffe Fellow and MIT professor Junot Diaz, who won the Pulitzer Prize for Fiction in 2008 for his novel, The Brief Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao, was announced as a winner. 

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