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.
This article features research from Lisa Auster-Gussman, a doctoral candidate in psychology, and explores gendered tropes about parenting through the lens of holiday greeting…
In order to make varied perspectives more accessible, Jane Sumner, professor of political science, created the Gender Balance Assessment Tool in 2016. The website generates an…
Last week I watched 175 middle school students cross the Northrop stage. They were the 8th-grade class of Northeast Middle School (NEMS) in Minneapolis, receiving their…
TIME turns to Kathryn Pearson, professor of political science, to explain how discharge petitions were used in the mid-20th-century and how they're used today. "Nowadays, as…
The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (MLK) program is in its 49th year and in April 2019 will mark the 50th anniversary of providing individualized, holistic, and culturally…
The FCC voted to repeal net neutrality in December 2017, and the repeal went into effect on Monday, June 11th, 2018. Christopher Terry, assistant professor of media ethics and…
David Perry, senior academic advisor in CLA history, writes about the idea of 'service' and the transactional relationships between faculty and students.
Bowwow Powwow, a new children's book by professor Brenda Child from the Department of American Studies, is the story of Windy Girl attending a powwow with her uncle and her…