We explore questions of the moment—the liberal arts are truly the front page of the newspaper—and enduring questions that help us to understand the present and the past and to anticipate the future.
Professor Doug Hartmann talks with Dialogue Minnesota about the Public Life Project which aims to help students become better able to understand opposing viewpoints and engage…
The University of Minnesota School of Music announces the return of audiences for student performances in Ted Mann Concert Hall. Our 2021-2022 season kicks off with the…
Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication associate professor Rebekah Nager is finding that prior exposure to conflicting health information reduces receptivity to…
Minnesota Design Center director Thomas Fisher discusses how the renovated Pillsbury Hall can be read on multiple levels with Enter, a publication of the American Institute of…
Congratulations to Richard Landers for winning HireVue’s Artificial Intelligence in Assessment Fellowship. Landers will have the opportunity to create a series of original…
In an article published in Health Affairs, Assistant Professor Elizabeth Wrigley-Field examines the association of neighborhood socioeconomic disadvantage with excess…
Many famous politicians are known for their blunt behavior that, in most other careers, would cost them their jobs, but yet in the political landscape makes them popular…