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Unfuzzy math: U.S. needs to do better 

Ed School expert has some ideas, including a rethink of homework bans, after ‘discouraging’ results


Two students working on a math problem.
Nation & World

Unfuzzy math: U.S. needs to do better 

Ed School expert has some ideas, including a rethink of homework bans, after ‘discouraging’ results

6 min read

The latest results of the Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study show that U.S. students’ math scores trail those of many of their global peers. They also reveal that U.S. math scores were lower in 2023 than they were in 2019. The test was given last year to fourth- and eighth-graders around the world.

In this edited conversation with the Gazette, Heather Hill, Hazen-Nicoli Professor in Teacher Learning and Practice at Harvard Graduate School of Education, details a “disappointing picture,” including the damage inflicted by pandemic learning loss, and offers ideas on how schools and students might rebound.


How do you interpret these results?

They first show that the U.S. is not where it wants to be in terms of these international comparisons. They also show that the work that we’ve put in over the last 20 to 30 years to try to improve our standing internationally has not paid off. There are not a lot of surprises here because we’ve been also seeing the same signal coming from the National Assessment of Educational Progress. It is a disappointing picture. If you think about kids sitting in classrooms who are going to graduate without being able to reason mathematically or apply mathematical concepts to new problems, it’s just discouraging.

How much of the decline has to do with pandemic learning loss?

A large majority of the decline is due to COVID. Many kids, particularly our most disadvantaged children, lost half a year of math learning because they weren’t in school or they were in a hybrid learning situation. A couple of things about this. First, while the majority of this learning loss occurred at the beginning of the pandemic, teachers reported that even after schools were back to in-person learning, students had forgotten how to “student,” meaning they had forgotten how to attend to instruction, how to do homework in a timely manner, and had lost ground on some of the positive social behaviors that we expect in classrooms. I think most teachers would say that things are now back almost to where they were before COVID, with maybe the exception of cell phones being so distracting for children, but it took several years.

Second, math is cumulative, and students who missed half a year of math are going to struggle to learn new material. A student who has not learned basic fractions in the fourth grade is going to have trouble with more sophisticated fractions in the fifth, sixth, and seventh grades, and when they reach algebra, they are going to have trouble with equations that contain rational expressions. And this leaves teachers struggling with the dilemma of whether to present new material or to spend time helping kids finish up the learning they didn’t quite get through during COVID. Math teachers’ time with their students is limited, and many teachers feel this dilemma acutely.

“Kids’ primary pathway to learning math is in school, and the only way to improve math instruction is through the constant improvement of what happens between teachers and students.”

Heather Hill.
Heather Hill.

How would you describe the state of math education in the U.S.?

It is highly variable. When I watch classrooms, I see some teachers knocking it out of the park — meaning I see kids talking about the math, solving sophisticated problems, and applying mathematics to new situations. And in other cases, the math is not taught very crisply, in the sense that the lesson might be a little bit conceptually disorganized, or the math may be hard to understand. Many teachers have a mix — a fair amount of student reasoning but also some disorganization around the mathematics.

Another thing is that the pandemic has changed the teaching labor force in the U.S. There are many more novice teachers, and they are therefore inexperienced with the math curricula.

One of the things that’s been promising is that in the last eight or nine years, there’s been more of a focus on high-quality curriculum materials and getting those in front of teachers, and having teachers learn how to use them and adapt them smartly for their children. As this movement continues to build steam, I’m hopeful that we will see improvements in math classroom quality.

Why is math so hard for so many U.S. children?

Some of this is about social pressure. Kids take in the messages that they hear from society about math. It’s common to hear messages like, “Oh, I’m not good in math” from friends or, from adults, “It’s OK not to be good in math; you’ll find something else to do.” Whereas in many other countries, math is seen as a prerequisite to a good life, and the understanding that even if it is a hard thing, you’re going to invest in it, and you’re going to do well.

Also, for many kids, math feels very foreign. They don’t see people like them doing math, and what happens in their math classroom doesn’t connect to their own interests and knowledge. Recently, scholars in my field have begun to think about how to revise curriculum materials so that they feature, for instance, mathematicians from other cultures or successful doers of math that look like the kids that are learning math.

Finally, we’ve moved away from giving students opportunities to practice the mathematics they’ve learned in class. This move comes from two sources: curriculum materials whose lessons contain little time for practice, and recent homework bans. Many of the homework bans are predicated on concerns about children’s unequal access to caregiver support for homework as well as concerns that some schools assign too much homework. But for a content area like math, it matters that kids have a chance to practice what they’ve learned in class.

How can the U.S. education system help students improve their math scores?

One thing that could help is changing the narrative about mathematics from one that says, “It’s OK if you don’t do well in math” to one that says, “If you work hard, you’re going to learn math because it’s logical and there is help.” There are ways everybody can learn math.

Working on teacher-student relationships can, maybe surprisingly, assist with math learning. When teacher-student relationships are strong, they result in better outcomes for kids across the board. In math, one reason may be that teachers can more easily engage kids in the work.

There’s such a scarcity of math teachers, which is driving some of the instructional quality issues. We have teachers who don’t have a background in math teaching math, and we also have folks without a background in teaching or math teaching math. Solving teacher pipeline issues is also key.

Kids’ primary pathway to learning math is in school, and the only way to improve math instruction is through the constant improvement of what happens between teachers and students. This means continuing to work on the quality of curriculum materials and engineering ways to enhance instruction.


Voice of a generation? Dylan’s is much more than that.

Classics professor who wrote ‘Why Bob Dylan Matters’ on the challenge of capturing a master of creative evasion


Bob Dylan with a harmonica and guitar

Bob Dylan recording his first album, “Bob Dylan,” in November 1961 at Columbia Studio in New York City.

Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Arts & Culture

Voice of a generation? Dylan’s is much more than that.

Classics professor who wrote ‘Why Bob Dylan Matters’ on the challenge of capturing a master of creative evasion

6 min read

“A Complete Unknown,” James Mangold’s new film about Nobel laureate Bob Dylan, will be released in the U.S. on December 25. Based on Elijah Wald’s 2015 book, “Dylan Goes Electric! Newport, Seeger, Dylan, and the Night That Split the Sixties,” the film, with Timothée Chalamet starring (and singing) in the lead role, depicts Dylan’s life from his 1961 arrival in New York to his controversial electric set at the Newport Folk Festival in 1965. 

Mangold’s movie has been nominated for three Golden Globes, praised by critics, and blessed by Dylan himself, but the judgment of audiences, including hardcore fans, awaits. How to portray an artist who seems to take pride in his talent for evasion? And why try?

In this edited conversation with the Gazette, Richard F. Thomas, the George Martin Lane Professor of the Classics and author of “Why Bob Dylan Matters,” discusses Dylan’s complex career, his singular voice, and his lasting impact as a songwriter and performer. 


Dylan’s voice is extremely important to his music. How hard is it to get that voice right?

Dylan never strives to recover in performance the sound of a studio album. The crowd may want to hear what they heard when they first dropped the needle on the record. Dylan’s not interested in that. Dylan is interested in the living song, and so, the living song will change from performance to performance. Take a great song like “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right,” and that final verse. Now, if you say it: “Don’t think twice, it’s all right,” that gives the song a certain meaning. If you sing “Don’t think twice, it’s all right,” that gives the song a very different meaning, both in its last verse and back onto the whole song. Dylan constantly is doing that. He’s upsetting audience expectation of the lyrics themselves, which change in performance as well as in drafts. He’s an oral poet in that way.

Should we be looking for an exact Dylan impression in this film? Is it possible to accurately depict someone who has never wanted to be categorized

I think it’s a challenge. Dylan was a little more open, though still dealing with the personas, in the early years. It’s in some ways easier to capture the Dylan of ’61, ’62, ’63, even though we don’t have much documentation of him. He was clearly concerned to not reveal too much from an early stage, but that of course intensified as he as he said himself, “I’m only Bob Dylan when I have to be.” That’s why I liked Todd Haynes’ movie [“I’m Not There,” which came out in 2007]. I thought Haynes’ way of dealing with the personae by having different characters of different ages and races and even gender playing Dylan was a brilliant move. Obviously, Mangold went at it more directly. That’s a greater challenge, in a way. 

Timothee Chalamet is seen on location for the Bob Dylan biopic titled 'A Complete Unknown'

Timothée Chalamet as Bob Dylan in “A Complete Unknown.”

Photo by Gotham/GC Images

What are your expectations for the film?

I don’t really care that much about the lived everyday life of Dylan as, partly from being a classicist, my poets have been dead for 2,000 years, and most of the biographical information is invention about them. Invention, from a century or more later, after they’d been classics, after they were being taught in the schools. Now, with Mangold, he sat down and I guess had two or three long conversations with Dylan and, from what I’ve read, Dylan told Mangold a few things that are not known from those years. So, will those be in the movie? And if so, will they reflect reality and truth, or will they reflect what Dylan was creating in 2023 or 2024, whenever he spoke to Mangold? Even the new biographical detail that we may get in the movie will not necessarily be reliable because it may well be a creative act by Bob Dylan.

Even if I personally end up being slightly disappointed, that won’t mean that the movie has failed. I don’t think it’s made for people like me. It’s made to depict a lifetime, or just a slice of a lifetime of the genius of our age, in terms of use of the English language in song.

After 20 years, why continue teaching a course on Dylan?

It’s partly the lyrics. He’s a poet; the lyrics are enduring. They’re not tied to a chronological moment or a political or cultural moment, they’re about issues that are enduring, that repeat over time, over history. Is that partly me, because I have followed Dylan so closely, whereas I haven’t necessarily followed or replayed Herman’s Hermits, Gerry & The Pacemakers, or other singers and groups I loved when I was young? Maybe it’s partly that, but I think it’s also Dylan. The classic status is one that establishes itself retrospectively. Dylan’s unusual in that the career continues in new and newly creative ways. There may even be another album — praise God if so! The story is still going on. And even when the story’s over, there will be performances and versions that we haven’t heard. 

“Why do I keep teaching Dylan? The same reason I keep teaching Virgil or Horace or Ovid: because it’s great literature, performance, great whatever you want to call it, and it represents the best that human genius can give us. ”

Why do I keep teaching Dylan? The same reason I keep teaching Virgil or Horace or Ovid: because it’s great literature, performance, great whatever you want to call it, and it represents the best that human genius can give us. That’s a gift that we should treasure and keep passing on as long as we have breath to do so. 


A small slice of time

An NSF project builds a special camera to shoot the night sky, light up dark matter, and map the Milky Way


Science & Tech

A small slice of time

This video shows Rubin’s Simonyi Survey Telescope in action, taking on-sky observations with the 144-megapixel test camera called the Commissioning Camera.

Credit: RubinObs/NSF/DOE/NOIRLab/SLAC/AURA/Hernan Stockebrand

5 min read

An NSF project builds a special camera to shoot the night sky, light up dark matter, and map the Milky Way

The night sky is now a little clearer.

With the ultimate goal of creating a comprehensive map of the universe, the 10-year Legacy Survey of Space and Time project passed a major milestone in October when its testing camera at the NSF-DOE Vera C. Rubin Observatory captured its first images of the night sky.

“With on-sky images obtained with our engineering camera, Rubin Observatory demonstrated that the Simonyi Survey Telescope and Rubin software frameworks are operational,” said University of Washington Professor Željko Ivezić, the observatory’s construction director.

As the team makes regular updates, its members are “excited about our next milestone: integrating our main camera, the largest astronomical camera ever constructed, with the telescope,” Ivezić said.

That main imager is the much larger LSST Camera, which will be capable of obtaining images 21 times bigger than the test camera’s. Work is now ongoing to prepare this camera for installation on the Chile-based telescope with the aim of having it up and running by the end of January. A commissioning period of approximately six months will follow, with the first public release of astronomical images expected in mid-2025.

The team plans to “make all the data immediately available to the entire community of scientists, [with] education outreach for K through 12th grade, and participating countries and institutions.”

Christopher Stubbs
Professor of Physics and of Astronomy Christopher Stubbs at the observatory in Chile.

Stubbs is currently working with the telescope’s team in Chile.

Credit: RubinObs/NSF/DOE/NOIRlab/AURA/A. Alexov

The LSST camera’s size and resolution are needed for “cosmic cinematography,” said Harvard Professor of Physics and of Astronomy Christopher Stubbs, who is currently working with the telescope’s team in Chile and was Rubin’s inaugural project scientist.

Explaining the project, which was conceived roughly 30 years ago, he said: “Astronomers had built large-aperture telescopes, which collect a lot of light to look at things that are faint. Astronomers had built wide-field telescopes that can look at a lot of things at the same time. The idea here was to put those two things together and make a wide-field, large aperture telescope that can look at lots of faint things all at once.”

By scanning the sky every few nights for 10 years with such a powerful telescope and camera, the observatory will garner “a time-lapse image of the sky every single night and look for everything that changes or moves,” Stubbs said.

The project, which is funded by the U.S. National Science Foundation and U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science, breaks ground on two fronts. The first, said Stubbs, is philosophical, as the team plans to “make all the data immediately available to the entire community of scientists, [with] education outreach for K through 12th grade, and participating countries and institutions.”

“The idea of completely wide-open data set is a new way of doing business,” he said.

The project is revolutionary in another way as well, said Stubbs, author of “Going Big: A Scientist’s Guide to Large Projects and Collaborations.” Previously, “people would point the telescope at their favorite object,” a particular galaxy or star. The wide field of the new telescope and its camera makes such a tight focus unnecessary. “The same stream of images will serve a wide span of scientific appetites, ranging from finding potentially hazardous killer asteroids in the solar system to mapping out the structure of our Milky Way to finding exploding stars halfway across the universe” he said.

The breadth and duration of this 10-year project may help unlock other secrets, such as the nature of dark matter and dark energy. Dark matter, Stubbs said, is the name we give to “90 percent of the mass of the Milky Way.”

“We infer its existence from its gravitational effect on things,” said Stubbs. So far, however, scientists have been unable to exactly define dark matter. Dark energy is a similar catch-all term for a force not yet identified, but which is making the universe expand “faster and faster and faster,” he said.

“With this instrument and system, which can do a super-precise job on calibration, we’re optimistic about our ability to look at dark matter and dark energy with unprecedented resolution.”

Ideally, the project will shed light on these mysteries and more. “This is the first instrument that we’ve really engineered from scratch to maximize our ability to study open questions in fundamental physics with astrophysical tools,” Stubbs said.

“The initial plan is to collect data for a 10-year period and process that through computer centers in California and in France, and then disseminate those results as broadly as we possibly can and empower both the formal astronomical community and informal education to make the most of this data set.”


What to expect when you’re elected

Bipartisan group of lawmakers gets to know Washington by way of the IOP


Nation & World

What to expect when you’re elected

Professor Jonathan Zittrain speaks to a packed room of newly elected members of Congress and observers during his panel discussion, “Implications of Artificial Intelligence.”

Professor Jonathan Zittrain leads a discussion, “Implications of Artificial Intelligence,” with newly elected members of Congress.

Photos by Martha Stewart

5 min read

Bipartisan group of lawmakers gets to know Washington by way of the IOP

Starting a new job can be intimidating and stressful — what are the unwritten rules, whom can I ask for help? Similarly, the first day of school can be both exciting and a little daunting — will I do well, where will I sit at lunch? Combine the two and you have a sense of what newly elected members of Congress are experiencing right now.

Every two years since 1972, the Institute of Politics has attempted to ease that transition by inviting first-year lawmakers to Harvard Kennedy School for an intensive three-day briefing about what they can expect once they’re sworn into office.

This year’s program, held Dec. 8-10, offered 37 new members from both parties an opportunity to talk to current and former lawmakers and hear from Harvard faculty on key domestic and international policy topics such as economics, national security, and artificial intelligence. The event included an address by Kennedy School Dean Jeremy Weinstein, who also took questions.

The institute’s director, Setti Warren, said that fostering bipartisanship is one of the conference’s main objectives.

“Bringing people from across the aisle together … is extremely important to us, giving them an opportunity to forge relationships in a place that’s not Washington, D.C.,” he said.

Representative-Elect John Mannion (NY-22, D) and Representative-Elect Sarah McBride (DE-AL, D) in conversation.
John Mannion of New York and Sarah McBride of Delaware.

Veteran lawmakers such as Republican Dan Crenshaw of Texas and Democrat Cheri Bustos of Illinois (who held office from 2013 to 2023) provided new members guidance on media coverage, effective messaging, and how to manage relationships with their new “classmates.”

“One of the things that was particularly important … was the message that that we heard time and time again from current and former members about the importance of kindness and collegiality toward our colleagues on the other side of the aisle,” said Representative-elect Sarah McBride, a Delaware Democrat.

The first openly transgender woman elected to Congress, McBride was the focus of national news coverage when Speaker Mike Johnson changed House rules at the urging of some Republican lawmakers to restrict restrooms to biological sex.

“Just as Americans every single day go into workplaces with people with different backgrounds and different perspectives but find a way to work together with kindness and collaboration,” said McBride, “we too should summon that basic common sense and basic common decency to work with our colleagues, regardless of our party affiliation or ideology in ways that reflect the kind of diversity of thought and diversity of experience that we see in workplaces across the country.”

Representative-elect Michael Baumgartner, M.P.A./I.D. ’02, a Republican in Washington state’s 5th district, said that while he’s “really proud” to be an HKS graduate, he was hesitant to publicize that he was attending because of what he called the School’s “unwelcoming reputation” on the right when it comes to conservative viewpoints.

New members of Congress attending a 3-day briefing at the Kennedy Schol
IOP Director Setti Warren (left), Missouri Democrat Wesley Bell, Colorado Republican Jeff Hurd, and Florida Republican Mike Haridopolos.

“And so, I was really pleased to hear the dean recommit to viewpoint diversity and intellectual diversity and to making sure that conservative Republicans feel like they have a place at the Kennedy School, too,” he said.

While looking forward to Republican control of Congress and the White House, Baumgartner noted the party’s razor-thin margin in the House and also the temporary nature of political victories.

“So, even though we’re going to be in charge this session, it may not always be that way,” he said. “And I hope some of the contacts and relationships that I made at the Harvard orientation will be helpful in the event that we’re not in the majority.”

Representative-elect Janelle Bynum, a Democrat who flipped a Republican-held seat in Oregon’s 5th district to become the state’s first Black member of Congress, said that there were two panels she found “very helpful.”

“The first was the one on AI. That just spun up a lot of different thoughts like moral authority and who gets to participate in that research or in that ecosystem; the financial impact of what’s being developed in AI.

“I’m always thinking, ‘How can we use a technology that may not be being deployed to our benefit right now, but how can we shift that or how can we [get it to] do more good than it is doing?” said Bynum, who also credited a talk about polls and Gen Z voters with John Della Volpe, the IOP’s director of polling.

Asked about her hopes for the new Congress, Bynum said, “The key word that has been emerging for me is governance. I hope Democrats and Republicans take seriously the need to govern” rather than squabbling or attention-seeking.

“Like, do the work.”


Defining and confronting campus antisemitism

Scholars in Jewish Studies say education, conversation can bolster efforts to defeat hate


L to R: Dov Waxman (UCLA), Rebecca Kobrin (Columbia), Anna Shternshis (U of Toronto), Maurice Samuels (Yale), and Derek J. Penslar (Harvard)

Panelists Dov Waxman, University of California, Los Angeles (from left), Rebecca Kobrin, Columbia University, Anna Shternshis, University of Toronto, Maurice Samuels, Yale University, and Derek J. Penslar, Harvard University.

Photo by Ilene Perlman

Nation & World

Defining and confronting campus antisemitism

Scholars in Jewish Studies say education, conversation can bolster efforts to defeat hate

5 min read

Jewish Studies faculty from eight North American universities came to Harvard this month to discuss rising antisemitism on their campuses.

The half-day conference, convened Dec. 10 by Derek J. Penslar, the William Lee Frost Professor of Jewish History and director of Harvard’s Center for Jewish Studies, kicked off with a panel discussing campus challenges during the 14 months since Hamas’ Oct. 7 massacre. Professors whose schools experienced high-profile protests in the spring touched on everything from media coverage to hidden gender dynamics within student activism. On the topic of antisemitism, the scholars said that the worst animus has been directed at Israeli students, staff, and faculty, while members of the broader Jewish community have endured targeted pressure to denounce Israel.

“What we’ve seen over many years is growing anti-Zionist sentiment on many college campuses, which often becomes a kind of anti-Israelism,” said Dov Waxman, professor of Israel studies and director of the Y&S Nazarian Center for Israel Studies at the University of California, Los Angeles. “In other words, it’s not just a principled demand for equal rights for Palestinians. It’s not just an opposition to Israel as a Jewish state … but an aversion to anything to do with Israel or anybody associated with Israel.”

Maurice Samuels, a French professor at Yale and director of the Yale Program for the Study of Antisemitism since 2011, emphasized an urgent need for Jewish studies curricula amid the emergence of a “new antisemitism.”

“How are student protesters supposed to know that they’re recycling tropes of classical antisemitism if they’ve never studied those tropes? We need to provide that education.”

Maurice Samuels, director of the Yale Program for the Study of Antisemitism

Classic forms of antisemitism, he said, excluded Jews for their supposed racial difference. “By contrast, the new antisemitism would be more likely to accuse Jews themselves of being racist for supporting what they see as a Jewish ethnostate in Israel,” said Samuels, who has pushed to include antisemitism in campus conversations on race.

Related to these issues, he added, is the place of anti-Zionism in competing definitions of antisemitism. Some organizations, like the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance, equate all forms of anti-Zionism with antisemitism, while other groups allow for various shades of distinction. The definitions converge around anti-Zionist expression that relies on the racist tropes of classic antisemitism, Samuels said.

“We’ve all seen examples of this over the past year, in which hoary conspiracy theories about Jews controlling finance and the media are trotted out to protest against Israel along with signs and symbols from the Nazi era,” he said. “Are all of these kinds of protests antisemitic? Are some of them? How are student protesters supposed to know that they’re recycling tropes of classical antisemitism if they’ve never studied those tropes? We need to provide that education.”

Picking up on the themes of anti-Zionism and anti-Israel bias was the University of Toronto’s Anna Shternshis, who directs the Anne Tanenbaum Centre for Jewish Studies. Shternshis, whose campus has seen increased calls to halt collaborations with Israeli researchers and institutions,  has heard from Israeli graduate students who were dropped by their advisers and from others who felt pressured to condemn their own family and friends living in Israel.

“It doesn’t matter what political views they had,” Shternshis said. “People with Israeli names, Israeli accents — they were immediately put on the stand.”

On the positive side, the school’s Jewish community has united like never before, she said, including through collaboration on their own definition of antisemitism. Shternshis excerpted one of the statement’s key passages: “Using ‘Zionist’ or ‘Zionism’ as a proxy for ‘Jewish’ or ‘Judaism’ does not excuse discriminatory or harassing actions.”

The conference featured a second session on teaching Jewish studies in a time of crisis, with faculty from Fordham, Princeton, Brandeis, and the University of California, Berkeley, stressing the need to bolster civil discourse skills for the classroom and beyond. Penslar, who also co-chairs Harvard’s Presidential Task Force on Combating Antisemitism and Anti-Israel Bias, ended both sessions by fielding audience inquiries on everything from the role of advocacy and “safe spaces” to why some U.S. universities have struggled far less with antisemitism.

Rebecca Kobrin, an associate professor of American Jewish history and co-director of Columbia University’s Institute for Israel and Jewish Studies, picked up on the last topic by praising Dartmouth College, highlighting its popular course on the Arab-Israeli conflict, co-taught by two scholars with complementary expertise in Jewish and Middle East Studies.

“What happens in the classroom is how you change the narrative,” Kobrin said. “It is really helpful to have a class where two professors show that there are two opposing views — and the students have to learn to talk to each other about it, just like the professors.”


Are reparations the answer?

Harvard symposium explores case for restitution to Black Americans legally, economically, ethically


Nation & World

Are reparations the answer?

Marcus Hunter (from left), Daniel Fryer, Christopher Lewis, Debora Spar, Erin Kelly, and James Gibson speaking during the event. Photos of a panel from the CRISES “Are Reparations the Answer?” Conference held in William James Hall B1 at Harvard University. The panel is titled “Redefining Justice: Moral, Ethical, and Political Dilemmas in Addressing Reparations and Racial Justice,” and features Daniel Fryer, Assistant Professor of Law and Philosophy at the University of Michigan, Christopher Lewis, Assistant Professor at Harvard Law School, James Gibson, Sidney W. Souers Professor of Government at Washington University in St. Louis, Debora Spar, Jaime and Josefina Chua Tiampo Professor of Business Administration at Harvard Business School, and Erin Kelly, Fletcher Professor of Philosophy at Tufts University. Marcus Hunter, Scott Waugh Endowed Chair in the Social Sciences Division, Professor of Sociology & African American Studies at the University of California Los Angeles, is the panel’s discussant.

Marcus Hunter (from left), Daniel Fryer, Christopher Lewis, Debora Spar, Erin Kelly, and James Gibson.

Photos by Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

3 min read

Harvard symposium explores case for restitution to Black Americans legally, economically, ethically

In 2021, the city of Evanston, Illinois, established a program to make reparations to Black residents for historic housing discrimination. The first phase of the project gave 16 residents $25,000 each for home repairs or property costs.

The Evanston program was one topic explored at the recent Center for Race, Inequality, and Social Equity Studies symposium “Are Reparations the Answer?” in which experts across disciplines explored the case for restitution to Black Americans legally, economically, and ethically.

Daniel Fryer, an assistant professor of law and philosophy at the University of Michigan and a speaker at the forum, praised the Evanston example because it targeted a specific injustice that the city was trying to repair. Fryer argued that practitioners must consider the different avenues to attain justice.

“An essential question is, what are we trying to repair?” said Fryer, who also serves as a board member for the Board of Commissioners’ Advisory Council on Reparations in Washtenaw County in Michigan. “In order to repair something, we need to know what’s broken, and it also helps to know why it’s broken.”

“An essential question is, what are we trying to repair? In order to repair something, we need to know what’s broken, and it also helps to know why it’s broken.”

Daniel Fryer
Daniel Fryer

Christopher Lewis, an assistant professor at Harvard Law School, also called for a need to clarify the distinctions between different types of reparations — under either compensatory justice or utilitarian justice, a moral principle that considers the greater good for the greatest number of people.

Lewis, along with Assistant Professor of Sociology and of Social Studies Adaner Usmani, has conducted research on what is owed to the estates of formerly enslaved people for their forced, unpaid labor. Using historic data on government bond yields, they arrived at a “conservative” estimate of the amount due for unpaid slave labor. The number reached into the quadrillions.

“It’s more wealth than exists in the entire world. That can tell you something about the scope and size of the injustice,” he said. These results prompted Lewis to consider other ways to look at the issue of reparations, including those shared by Duke University’s William Darity Jr., and museum curator Kirsten Mullen, who gave the keynote address earlier in the conference.

Darity and Mullen, founder of Artefactual, co-authored “From Here to Equality,” which focused on how to close the racial wealth gap, suggesting an intraracial redistribution of $16 trillion, with Black American families receiving at least a million dollars each.

Raj Chetty analyzed empirical patterns in Black-white economic disparities in a panel. The William A. Ackman Professor of Economics and director of Opportunity Insights discussed his research on how income evolves across generations for Black children versus white children.

Black children who come from high-income families tend to trend downward in terms of economic mobility as adults, compared to their white counterparts, who tend to remain at the top, he said. “In my view, this is really fundamental to understanding how to close the persistence of racial disparities in the U.S.,” he said.

The economist acknowledged that when conducting this research he had expected racial disparities for communities of color would narrow if individuals had sufficient income. The data proved him wrong, he said. “Understanding what’s happening there strikes me as really crucial to make progress, and addressing those disparities is really fundamental,” Chetty said.


Universal, adaptable, wearable, vulnerable

‘On Display Harvard’ uses performance, zip ties, to bring attention to the UN’s International Day of Persons With Disabilities


Audience members observe ON DISPLAY HARVARD, performed in the Calderwood Courtyard at the Harvard Art Museums.

“On Display Harvard,” an hourlong performance undertaken by Harvard students, staff, and community members, captures the audience’s attention in the Calderwood Courtyard at the Harvard Art Museums.

Photos by Grace DuVal

Campus & Community

Universal, adaptable, wearable, vulnerable

5 min read

‘On Display Harvard’ uses performance, zip ties, to bring attention to the UN’s International Day of Persons With Disabilities

As you walk past the columns of the Harvard Art Museums and step into the bright light of Calderwood Courtyard, you see a group of 16 people dressed in white. They are arranged in various positions, some standing, some sitting, some using wheelchairs or crutches. They all are wearing garments made of zip ties — plastic spikes protruding at different angles. The forms drape around each performer’s arms, shoulders, legs. The only sounds to break the silence are the low murmurs from visitors who wend between the performers, watching intently, photographing, taking video. Moment by moment the performer’s movements change, gentle shifts in their body, each gesture intuitively executed slowly and thoughtfully.

The scene you are witnessing is “On Display Harvard,” a durational performance installation presented by the Office for the Arts at Harvard (OFA) Dance Program. A mix of Harvard staff, students, and community members come together each year on Dec. 3 as part of “On Display Harvard,” an annual commemoration of the United Nations’ International Day of Persons With Disabilities. This worldwide social justice initiative, created by physically integrated dance company Heidi Latsky Dance, brings together performers across the spectrum of abilities, ages, sizes, and races, into a singular space.

Founded in 2015, the durational performances of “On Display Harvard” create living sculpture parks that the audience is invited to wander through, viewing each performer up close.

“By exposing the general public to our widely diverse sculpture courts, we are expanding what inclusion looks like,” states the “On Display” website.

The sculptural garments worn during this year’s “On Display Harvard”  were created by Harvard Graduate School of Design ’24 alumni Pin Sangkaeo and Benson Joseph, collectively known as (snobs._). Collaborators since they met at the School of Architecture at Syracuse University, for the past three years (snobs._) has created one-of-a-kind wearables for “On Display Harvard.” On its statement, (snobs._) explained that to build the garments for each performer “you have to create something that is universal, but at the same time has the capability to be adaptable. Zip ties are the way that we did the wearables. We pre-model a series of implied poses and where they can be put, and then we lay the pictures out on the wall, and we let [the performers] pick and … we modify it to fit the person better. It’s like sketching at full scale.”

Using more than 8,000 zip ties and taking more than a year and a half to complete, the wearables are part of an ongoing, ever-evolving project for (snobs._). Collaborating with the performers of “On Display” allows the creative team to see and understand their work more profoundly. After the event the performers and designers sat together in the greenroom sharing their performance experiences.

“The feedback is the most important part. There’s a validation that comes in when other people offer all the insights of things that maybe you weren’t thinking about … it’s not possible to do that kind of work without feedback,” noted (snobs._).

Sandra El Hadi performs.
Graduate student Sandra El Hadi peers through one of the sculptural garments made of zip ties by Harvard Graduate School of Design alumni, collectively known as (snobs._). The zip ties were reconstituted from an earlier, large-scale sculptural installation exhibited in Harvard Square.
Sarah Yee performs.
Harvard College student Sarah Yee strikes a durational pose. Each zip tie garment was chosen by the performer and custom-fit to his or her body.
Olivia Schrantz performs.
Olivia Schrantz, Harvard student-led dance group coach, closes her eyes during an enduring gesture. (snobs._) ruminated on the intensity of the hourlong performance: “It does something to your mind in a vulnerable state, it forces you to be with yourself for an hour.”
Audience members observe the performance.
The community was invited to move through the performers during the durational work, allowing each audience member to closely observe the performers’ slow movements and intricate garments.
Jassi Murad performs.
More than 8,000 tessellated zip ties were linked together to create the wearable art embodied by dancer Jassi Murad.
Mindy Koyanis performs.
Sanders Theatre staff member and Extension School student Mindy Koyanis moves her hand in slow, cyclical gestures. Koyanis has performed with “On Display Harvard” multiple times over the years.
Jessica Sun performs.
Harvard graduate student Jessica Sun assists audience members in a tactile tour of the custom wearables. Guided tours of the garments and performance were provided to all audience members, allowing greater access to the event.
Community members engage with the performance.
Community members engage with the performance from different perspectives in Calderwood Courtyard, taking photos, videos, and quietly discussing the work.
Yarumi González performs.
Yarumi González slowly slides off a chair during the performance. “Oftentimes people think ‘On Display’ [is about] staying still and you’re moving slow, but it requires so much control that it actually ends up being more work,” explains (snobs._).
Nicolai Calabria performs as an observer’s guide dog investigates.
Nicolai Calabria is investigated by an observer’s guide dog as he performs.
Nora Rodas performs.
Nora Rodas, a community member and undergraduate student at Dean College in Franklin, Massachusetts, moves in and out of her wheelchair throughout the performance.
Jeffry Pike performs.
Harvard retiree Jeffry Pike wears a mask of zip ties. Responding to the wearables provided, Pike chose to put the piece over his face, surprising the designers.
Mindy Koyanis performs.
Koyanis focuses intently as she performs.
Charles Murrell III performs.
Local musician Charles Murrell III slowly leans against a pillar of the Harvard Art Museums.


Nature offers novel approach to oral wound care

Slug’s sticky mucus inspiration behind adhesive hydrogel that can seal wounds in wet environment


Health

Nature offers novel approach to oral wound care

Slug’s sticky mucus inspiration behind adhesive hydrogel that can seal wounds in wet environment

4 min read
Slug crawling on a leaf.

A discovery inspired by the humble slug may soon be the answer to managing painful oral lesions associated with chronic inflammatory conditions and sealing surgical wounds in the mouth.  

Scientists at Harvard had been searching for a biomaterial that would hold up in wet conditions — that’s when they turned to Mother Nature for inspiration. When slugs feel threatened, they secrete a sticky mucus that protects them from predators. This mucus has strong mechanical properties allowing it to stick to wet surfaces and stretch about 10 to 15 times its original length.  

Inspired by these properties, researchers in the Mooney Lab of the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences, and the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Engineering, developed a strong adhesive patch composed of 90 percent water from a natural polymer derived from algae, and present in dental impression materials. The adhesive patch will work on wet surfaces and is not toxic to humans. After finding it successfully stuck to animal tissues, acting as a surgical wound sealing biomaterial in lab testing, their findings were published in Science in 2017. 

Now, its applications for oral health and treatment of painful oral lesions may be coming soon to a dental office near you. David Tiansui Wu, D.M.Sc. ’23, instructor of oral medicine, infection, and immunity, has been involved in the development of an adhesive hydrogel patch that can seal wounds and act as an intraoral Band-Aid capable of strong adhesion in wet environments and on dynamically moving surfaces. His work as a postdoctoral research fellow and periodontology resident at Harvard School of Dental Medicine first exposed him to the slug-inspired biomaterial, and connections he made in the Mooney Lab fueled his interest in developing a product for use in dental medicine. 

“When I started at Harvard University, I had the privilege of meeting Professor David Mooney, who is a world-renowned expert in tissue engineering and biomaterials and decided to start my doctoral thesis at the lab,” Wu said. “At that time, Benjamin Freedman, a postdoctoral fellow at the lab, was working on the preclinical translation of the tough adhesive hydrogel technology for diverse medical and health care applications, such as hemostasis in general surgery, tendon repair in orthopedic surgery, and wound sealing in dermatology. As a periodontist in training, the possibility of bringing this revolutionary technology from benchtop to patient care appeared to be a great opportunity to solve unmet needs in our field,” Wu said. 

“This technology can be applied to seal surgical sites such as gingival graft harvest sites, extraction sockets, bone augmentation surgical sites, and much more.” 

David Tiansui Wu
Benjamin Freedman and David Tiansui Wu.
Benjamin Freedman and David Tiansui Wu, the developers of Dental Tough Adhesive (DenTAl).

Wu collaborated with Freedman to advance the preclinical testing and development of the technology and expand its functionality with drug-release capabilities that would allow the hydrogel to deliver a range of medications relevant for dental, oral, and craniofacial applications. 

In parallel, Wu and Freedman began working with other faculty collaborators at the Massachusetts General Hospital departments of Oral and Maxillofacial Surgery and of Dermatology respectively, including Fernando Guastaldi and Yakir Levin, to conduct preclinical validation of the adhesive technology in oral applications. 

Together, they developed what they call “Dental Tough Adhesive (DenTAl).” Their findings were published in a landmark paper in the Journal of Dental Research, paving the way for the technology’s clinical translation to one day impact patient care. 

Chronic inflammatory conditions, such as oral lichen planus and recurrent canker sores, “negatively affect patients’ quality of life,” said Wu. “Current treatment approaches are mainly palliative and often ineffective due to inadequate contact time of the therapeutic agent with the lesions. 

“This novel technology has the potential to impact several areas in dentistry, including applications in oral wound repair and regeneration, and drug delivery. In periodontics and oral surgery, this technology can be applied to seal surgical sites such as gingival graft harvest sites, extraction sockets, bone augmentation surgical sites, and much more. Our vision is to one day develop sutureless wound repair,” he added. 

This innovative technology is now being translated into the clinical arena through a license for continued development beyond the laboratory. The multidisciplinary team is taking the next steps to bring the technology into the dental office by obtaining clearance from regulatory authorities such as the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. 

“My goal as a clinician, scientist, and innovator is basically to bridge the gap between benchtop research and the clinical arena,” Wu said. “We are excited to translate this technology to impact millions of patients and their dentists in improving their oral health.” 


Time for a rethink of colonoscopy guidelines?

Change informed by new findings would help specialists focus on those most at risk, researcher says


Health

Time for a rethink of colonoscopy guidelines?

Mingyang Song

Mingyang Song.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

3 min read

Change informed by new findings would help specialists focus on those most at risk, researcher says

A new analysis of nearly 200,000 adults shows that those with a clean result on their first colonoscopy may not need another for longer — perhaps significantly longer — than the current recommendation of 10 years.

The result is a bit of good news about a cancer whose increasing rates in younger patients has worried experts, including the Harvard Chan School’s Mingyang Song, for several years. Colorectal cancer is the nation’s second-deadliest after lung cancer, killing an estimated 52,550 in 2023. While rates among older patients have been declining, younger patients — those 40 to 49 — have seen cases rise 15 percent between 2000 and 2026. Experts aren’t sure of the cause, but in 2021, the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force lowered the recommended age of first screening to 45 from 50. They also recommend that those with average risk get screened 10 years afterward.

Song, an associate professor of clinical epidemiology and nutrition at the Chan School, said that the increase in screenings has also increased appointment wait times.

“Especially with the lowered age, the clinic is overwhelmed,” said Song, also an associate professor at Harvard Medical School. “It was overwhelmed before, now it’s even worse.”

In the work, published last month in JAMA Oncology, Song and colleagues examined colorectal cancer screening results and colorectal cancer incidence among 195,453 participants in three long-running studies: the Nurses’ Health Study, Nurses’ Health Study II, and the Health Professionals Followup Study. They compared incidence between two groups: those who received negative results in their initial colorectal cancer screening — meaning no polyps or cancer — and those who had not yet been screened.

They found that the risk of developing colorectal cancer was significantly lower among those who had received a negative cancer screening than those who had not yet been screened. The research team, led by first author Markus Knudsen, a postdoctoral fellow in Song’s lab, then divided the negative screening result group according to lifestyle risk factors for colorectal cancer. The work was supported in part by the National Institutes of Health.

The results showed that, among individuals with a negative screening result, it took 16 years for those with an intermediate-risk profile to have the same colorectal cancer incidence of the high-risk group at 10 years, and those with a low-risk profile — including maintaining a healthy diet and exercise — didn’t reach the 10-year cancer incidence of the high-risk group until 25 years from their negative screening.

The results, Song said, show that cancer screening should be individualized and discussed between patient and physician. While it is likely that additional evidence will be needed before national screening guidelines are changed, those with a negative screening result may be able to safely extend the screening interval beyond the recommended 10 years and, for those also living a low-risk lifestyle, perhaps as long as 20 years.

What this more tailored approach would do, Song said, is spare those who might get little benefit from a colonoscopy while focusing increasingly scarce resources where they’re most needed: on people who’ve never been screened — only about 70 percent of eligible U.S. adults have been screened — on disadvantaged groups with historically lower screen rates, and on those whose lifestyle or family history puts them at increased risk.  

“What we have seen generally is that the more advantaged groups of individuals are more likely to receive colonoscopy, whereas those who are disadvantaged and who actually have a higher risk of developing colon cancer are less likely to receive colonoscopy,” Song said. “We’ve tried to correct this mismatch and improve colonoscopy delivery at the population scale.”


Three Harvard students named Marshall Scholars

‘Chance of a lifetime’ for recipients whose fields include history, genomics, K-12 education


Campus & Community

Three Harvard students named Marshall Scholars

Ryan Doan-Nguyen, John Lin, Laila Nasher

Ryan Doan-Nguyen (from left), John Lin, and Laila Nasher.

Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer; Grace DuVal; and courtesy of Laila Nasher

6 min read

‘Chance of a lifetime’ for recipients whose fields include history, biology, education policy

Three Harvard students will take their passions for journalism, health equity, and education equity to the United Kingdom next year as members of the 2025 Marshall Class. Ryan Doan-Nguyen, John Lin, and Laila Nasher are among 36 students nationwide to receive 2025 Marshall Scholarships, which support two years of study at a U.K. college or university.


Ryan Doan-Nguyen.
Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Ryan Doan-Nguyen

Joint concentration in History & Literature and Government, with a secondary in Ethnicity, Migration, Rights

Doan-Nguyen ’25, of Westborough, Massachusetts, strives to bridge research, writing, and advocacy in journalism and history. Having grown up listening to his family’s stories about fleeing the Vietnam War as refugees, he is passionate about amplifying marginalized voices in his work. His senior thesis includes oral history interviews with 40 Vietnamese refugees impacted by imperialism.

“There’s so much knowledge and innovation and ways of thought and approaching the world that are excluded because of the way in which we value certain voices more than others,” Doan-Nguyen said. “I’m trying to help break that down in the work that I do.”

The night the Mather House resident learned that he had been named a Marshall Scholar, he ran straight to his roommate to share the good news. Then he called his family and his closest mentors.

“It’s the chance of a lifetime, and I did not expect to receive it in the slightest,” Doan-Nguyen said. “I just remember receiving the call and being so overwhelmed with gratitude.”

Doan-Nguyen is a Mellon Mays Undergraduate Research Fellow, an editor for The Harvard Crimson, and co-founder of a Harvard chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association. He served previously on the JFK Jr. Forum Committee at Harvard Kennedy School and on the board of the Harvard Vietnamese Association.

Doan-Nguyen plans to attend the University of Oxford, where he will study global and imperial history the first year and U.S. history the second year.


John Lin.
Photo by Grace DuVal

John Lin

Human Developmental and Regenerative Biology; secondary in Global Health and Health Policy

Lin ’25, of Boston, wants to know what different rare diseases have in common, and what factors link them together.

As a member of the Greka Lab at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Lin studies how cells harness cargo receptors to recognize, degrade, or trap misfolded proteins. He has investigated how cargo receptors regulate disease severity in a rare kidney illness and is applying his findings to other rare diseases.

“We’re finding that if you target these cargo receptors, you can clear misfolded protein in each of these diseases, suggesting that these different misfolded proteins are trapped through this common mechanism,” Lin said. “Just by targeting these common pathways, you can resolve many different rare diseases.”

Lin is also interested in using science journalism to make information more accessible to the general public. The Currier House resident said he became passionate about health equity after seeing his parents, working-class immigrants from China, face linguistic and economic barriers in accessing care.

“Even though I was really interested in solving these diseases and at the most direct level through research, I realized through observing my family’s experiences that it’s not just discovering the science that’s important but also getting the science to the people who are impacted by it every day,” Lin said.

Lin was swimming in the Malkin Athletic Center pool when the call came that he had been named a 2025 Marshall scholar.

“I was really surprised,” said Lin, who immediately phoned his mom to share the news. “I’m very, very grateful for the opportunity.”

Lin is co-president of the Harvard Global Health Institute’s Student Advisory Committee and an associate magazine editor for The Crimson. He also works for the Harvard Ed Portal mentoring youth from Allston-Brighton.

Lin plans to spend his first year as a Marshall Scholar studying biological sciences at the Wellcome Sanger Institute for genomics research at the University of Cambridge, and his second studying medical anthropology at the University of Oxford.


Laila Nasher.

Laila Nasher 

History and Anthropology; secondary in Ethnicity, Migration, Rights 

Nasher ’25 wants education to be a protected American right for all students. A first-generation college student, Nasher said that coming to Harvard after attending public school in her low-income neighborhood in Detroit fueled her desire to make change. 

“For me it was the question of, why not us?” said Nasher. “Why did I and why did the people in my community never have these types of educational opportunities that are and should be the norm?” 

A joint concentrator in History and Anthropology, with a secondary in Ethnicity, Migration, Rights, Nasher found her passion for history in her first year in a course on the modern Middle East that “completely opened” her mind to a subject matter that felt “so much bigger” than herself. A Truman Scholar and a Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellow, Nasher focuses in her research on the history of feminism in South Yemen before and after independence from the British, and after unification with North Yemen. 

Nasher was in her Mather House dorm room when she got the call that she had received a Marshall, and immediately celebrated the news with her roommate. 

“I was just in shock and very, very grateful,” Nasher said.

On campus, Nasher founded the First-Generation Low-Income Task Group, served on the board of Primus, and was co-director of diversity and outreach for the Institute of Politics. Off-campus, she interned with Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib and the Tawakkol Karman Foundation in Istanbul, and organized with the Michigan Education Justice Coalition.  

She’ll spend her first year as a Marshall Scholar studying education at the University of Oxford, where she plans to do a comparative study on how primary and K-12 education systems in the U.K. and the U.S. shape the experiences of people in low-income, urban Yemeni communities.


Should pharmacists be moral gatekeepers?

‘The problem is not opioids,’ says author of ‘Policing Patients’ — it’s overdose, pain


Pharmacist talking to a patient about prescription.
Health

Should pharmacists be moral gatekeepers?

‘The problem is not opioids,’ says author of ‘Policing Patients’ — it’s overdose, pain

8 min read

Since the opioid epidemic was declared a public health crisis in 2017, it has claimed the lives of nearly half a million Americans. High-profile cases like that against Purdue Pharma and the Sackler family put the focus on prescription drugs, but the reality is far more complicated, says Elizabeth Chiarello, author of “Policing Patients: Treatment and Surveillance on the Frontlines of the Opioid Crisis” and a former fellow at the Harvard Radcliffe Institute. Over the course of 10 years, she spoke to healthcare workers who face difficult choices between treating and punishing patients, and the problems that have arisen from policing drugs at the pharmacy counter. The Gazette spoke to Chiarello about what she learned. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.


At the beginning of your book, you say the problem is pain, not drugs. Why should pain be centered in conversations about the opioid epidemic?

When we talk about the opioid crisis, we usually categorize two groups of people: those with substance use disorders and those in chronic pain. We act as if these are two different groups of people who have little in common, with the implication that people with pain have a legitimate claim on opioids and the people with substance use disorders do not. Pain is the throughline that connects these two groups. Whether we’re talking about pain from mental health disorders or the pain of trauma, substance use disorders are often a mechanism of self-medication or avoiding pain. People with substance use disorders are often taking opioids not to chase a high, but because they’re trying to avoid the pain of withdrawal.

It’s worth mentioning that when we think about pain, the boundaries we’re willing to set around other people’s bodies are very different than the boundaries we’re willing to set around our own. When we are in pain, we are very eager to stop it, and we’d want any resources available to help us.

“People with substance use disorders are often taking opioids not to chase a high, but because they’re trying to avoid the pain of withdrawal.”

During your research, you were surprised to learn pharmacists are on the front lines of this crisis.

Culturally, pharmacists don’t loom particularly large in our collective imagination; they’re often behind the scenes filling prescriptions and we don’t always know their names (whereas we tend to know a lot about our doctors and are very selective about who we choose). People often believe that pharmacists just dispense whatever it is that the doctor orders. But in fact, they are professionals who work under their own licenses; they have extensive discretion at the pharmacy counter. Pharmacists act as medical, legal, fiscal, and moral gatekeepers; they balance those different gatekeeping roles in different organizational settings, but ultimately decide who receives medications.

Pharmacists use something called prescription drug monitoring programs, or PDMPs. What are they and what role do they play?

PDMPs are two-tiered “big data” surveillance systems. When a patient goes to the pharmacy with a prescription for an opioid, the pharmacist dispenses the medication and then sends that information to the organization that runs the PDMP. It varies from state to state but could include the Board of Pharmacy, the Board of Health, the Department of Justice, or Department of Consumer Affairs. They then partner with a private company that compiles that information and feeds it back to healthcare providers who can use it to make decisions about patient care.

However, they also feed that information to law enforcement, who can use it to make decisions about targeting healthcare professionals and access individual patient data. You might wonder, isn’t this all covered under HIPAA? And the truth is it’s not. PDMPs are not afforded the same privacy protections as other healthcare data. We see both physicians and pharmacists reorienting towards policing, away from care, and toward using this surveillance system. As a result, patients are routed out of healthcare and left incredibly vulnerable.

Raquita Henderson.
Credit: Raquita Henderson, Pinxit Photo & Cinema

One aspect of the opioid crisis that has received a lot of media attention is the role of organizations like Purdue Pharma. In what ways has their role — while not to be minimized — become an oversimplification of what’s happening?

The Purdue story has been everywhere; it’s been in bestsellers, movies, TV shows, and in lawsuits. The problem is not that the story is wrong, but that it’s incomplete. It places a lot of blame on the shoulders of a single medication and a single company. What we lose is the last 100 years of drug policy, where we’ve seen the drug policy pendulum swing back and forth between medicalization and criminalization.

For example, at the turn of the 20th century, there were a lot of middle-class, rural housewives who were hooked on opium and it wasn’t considered a social problem. But when Asian men came over to build the railroads, we saw the criminalization of opium. Then in 1914 we passed the first drug law, the Harrison Narcotics Tax Act, that made it illegal to give people medication just for the purposes of preventing withdrawal. Supreme Court cases followed, and we saw the arrests of thousands of physicians and pharmacists that led to a chilling effect around opioids for around 50 years. In the 1980s we had the hospice movement in England that argued people shouldn’t have to die in pain. On the heels of that movement followed the pain-management movement in the United States that said if people shouldn’t have to die in pain, they shouldn’t have to live in pain either. They pushed for increased access to opioids and drew attention to chronic pain patients who had been undertreated for decades.

If you don’t know that story, it seems as if OxyContin came out of nowhere and did an extraordinary amount of harm. But a lot of the increase in prescribing that we saw at the end of the 1990s was really a corrective to underprescribing that had been happening for decades before that.

You go as far as saying that we should reframe the current epidemic as an overdose crisis, rather than one of opioids.

With drug policy, we have a tendency to put our blinders on and focus very narrowly on a single drug or class of drugs. Crack was the problem in the 1980s and ’90s, then meth was the problem in the early 2000s, then prescription opioids, then heroin, and then fentanyl, and now xylazine [also know by street name “tranq.”] But when we treat these as individual, isolated crises, we miss the throughline and the larger story. The problem is not opioids. The problem is overdose. I think we need to talk about it as both an overdose crisis and a pain crisis, because millions of people are suffering in chronic pain and cannot get help.

“We need a three-pronged approach to addressing the overdose crisis, one that’s grounded in treatment, harm reduction, and prevention.”

What stories stuck with you the most during the course of your research?

My dad is a doctor. Hearing what doctors have to say and the ways they feel trapped is hard. And for some doctors, the kind of callousness that they bring to their patients was incredibly disheartening. You know, the doctors who are like, “I tell the patient, I’m going to taper them down, and I don’t care how they feel about it.” Or they stop seeing patients if their urine tests come back positive.

But then there are other physicians like Megan. She worked in a federally qualified health center, which ironically, gave her a little bit more leeway than those who work in private clinics. She had a lot of patients with substance use disorders, so she went out and got the credentials she needed to treat those patients. She had a lot of patients in pain, so she went out and got those credentials. She pushed back on other doctors who were using punitive mechanisms. She was the quintessential patient advocate, and doctors like that really give me hope.

There was a police officer in California who lost his brother to overdose and that drove a lot of the work that he did. He experienced a tragedy, and then his mission became trying to prevent that from happening to other people.

What next steps do you recommend to change our approach to this issue?

We need a three-pronged approach to addressing the overdose crisis, one that’s grounded in treatment, harm reduction, and prevention. When people think about treatment, they often think about either a 28-day inpatient treatment facility or self-help programs like Narcotics Anonymous. But in head-to-head comparisons, we know medications for opioid use disorder are the most effective treatments. We should also expand the types of pain treatment that are available; manipulative therapies like massage and Rolfing therapy can really help.

Then harm reduction. That includes things like Narcan, syringe service programs that provide sterile syringes to people who inject drugs, hotlines like SafeSpot and Never Use Alone, and overdose-prevention sites.

And finally, prevention. I mean capital “P” prevention. We need to uplift our communities and reinforce our social safety net. People have a hard time finding housing, jobs, access to high-quality healthcare. Addressing these issues is an upstream way of dealing with drug crises. Otherwise, we end up with just one crisis after the next.

Go Deeper

Listen to Liz Chiarello’s interview on the BornCurious podcast about the US pain and overdose crises.


Holiday treats from the kitchen of Julia Child

Recipes from celebrity chef’s archive at Radcliffe


Arts & Culture

Holiday treats from the kitchen of Julia Child

Collage of Julia Child photos, a cook book, plates, and baking supplies.

Photo illustrations by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff

long read

Recipes from celebrity chef’s archive at Radcliffe

Julia Child in the kitchen.


The French Chef episode #258: Sole bonne femme.

Photograph by Paul Child. © Schlesinger Library, Harvard Radcliffe Institute. ID #8001636784.

Planning a holiday meal and need inspiration? The Schlesinger Library at Harvard Radcliffe Institute has you covered. It holds the papers of the late celebrity chef Julia Child, author of the iconic cookbook “Mastering the Art of French Cooking” and personality behind the long-running PBS television series “The French Chef.” She famously hosted other cooking shows from the kitchen of her Cambridge home. Radcliffe curators helped pull together the following recipes for festive desserts drawn from their vast collection, which includes correspondence, documents, books, photos, audio, and videotapes.


Julia child cooking

The French Chef episode #87: Quiches.

Photograph by Paul Child. © Schlesinger Library, Harvard Radcliffe Institute. ID #olvwork538495.

Julia Child demonstrating a frosting technique, with Merida.

Julia Child demonstrating a frosting technique, with Merida.

Photograph by Paul Child. © Schlesinger Library, Harvard Radcliffe Institute. ID #olvwork478684.

Presents under a Christmas tree.

Presents at base of tree.

Photograph by Paul Child. © Schlesinger Library, Harvard Radcliffe Institute. ID olvwork584632.

“There are the pleasures of giving at Christmastime, and the most welcome pleasure of receiving guests bearing edible gifts — something good to eat!”

Julia Child, Parade Magazine, Dec. 13, 1982


The deadly habit we can’t quite kick

Actions by tobacco companies worry researcher even amid ‘dramatic decrease’ in smoking among young Americans


Health

The deadly habit we can’t quite kick

Vaughan Rees

Vaughan Rees.

Veasey Conway/Harvard Staff Photographer

7 min read

Actions by tobacco companies worry researcher even amid ‘dramatic decrease’ in smoking among young Americans

Smoking has declined in the U.S., but 49.2 millions Americans, about 20 percent, still use tobacco products. And the tobacco wars rage on, with rates rising globally even as they’re falling in many developed countries. Tobacco companies have created new active compounds to replace cooling menthol and mimic addicting nicotine in an end run around state laws seeking to reduce the harm tobacco products do. Those steps forced California in September to pass legislation closing loopholes in laws banning menthol and regulating nicotine. The Gazette spoke with Vaughan Rees, director of the Center for Global Tobacco Control at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, about the increasing sophistication of the tobacco battlefield. This interview has been edited for length and clarity.


Tobacco companies have developed new formulations of nicotine and menthol, sparking an argument as to whether the new compounds can be regulated by current laws. How big a loophole is this?

It could be an enormous loophole, and tobacco manufacturers have exploited it in some states. For example, in Massachusetts, when a ban on the use of methylation went into effect, tobacco manufacturers came up with an analog product that functions like menthol, that imparts a cooling sensation, and that was not technically banned under the Massachusetts law. So tobacco manufacturers continued to sell products that looked, tasted, and functioned almost exactly like mentholated cigarettes.

That subverted the intention of the law, which was to prevent consumers from being misled about the health risks of smoking and to prevent young people from starting smoking, in part because of menthol’s cooling sensation.

How big a problem is the substitution of ingredients to circumvent restrictions? Is this a blip and once lawmakers understand the strategy, they can get ahead of it? Or is this potentially opening a new front in the tobacco wars?

Relatively few jurisdictions in the United States have put product standards like this in place. Massachusetts and California are leaders in that area with bans on methylation, and a ban on the use of synthetic nicotine compounds is about to go into effect in California. So tobacco manufacturers haven’t really had to do much, in a wider way, in terms of subverting those laws.

If a federal ban did go into effect, tobacco manufacturers would very likely seek to introduce menthol or nicotine analogs. Better-crafted regulations should eliminate the opportunity for tobacco manufacturers to substitute analog chemicals for menthol or nicotine. But it’s been a long-term theme of tobacco manufacturers to subvert the intention of laws put in place to protect the health of the public.

Another example was the adoption of clean indoor air laws. There was a lot of pushback from tobacco manufacturers or allies of tobacco manufacturers. The owners of hospitality venues argued that they could create smoking sections in pubs or restaurants, for example, that would  meet the needs of all of their customers. But the science doesn’t support that. When people are smoking in one part of a room or building, the smoke infiltrates other areas, exposing nonsmokers and workers to secondhand smoke.

In the end, public health and science prevailed, but it took some effort to ensure that public venues were 100 percent smoke-free. Tobacco manufacturers have prevailed in other parts of the world, though. In other countries, laws have been put in place that allowed smoking if portions of the building are open-air.

1% Or less of Massachusetts high school students smoke cigarettes

Are there other significant developments on the tobacco-control scene?

Nicotine is the constituent that causes or promotes addiction, so there’s a rationale for thinking about reducing the nicotine in tobacco products below the level at which those products can be considered addictive. That is something that the FDA has proposed as a potential strategy to reduce harm associated with tobacco products.

The idea is that tobacco manufacturers might one day be required to sell cigarettes and other tobacco products that have such low levels of nicotine that people would never become addicted to them. Those products would still produce smoke that contains carcinogens and other dangerous constituents, but consumers wouldn’t be addicted, and the product couldn’t satisfy anybody’s nicotine dependence.

How far along are plans for this new, low-nicotine cigarette?

The FDA issued a proposed federal rule in 2018. The FDA has regulatory authority for tobacco products and can issue regulations around the way products are designed, formulated, sold, and marketed.

A few years ago, the FDA issued what is called “an advanced notice of proposed rulemaking” to seek public comment and input from stakeholders — which includes public health agencies and tobacco manufacturers — to guide a proposed final rule.

We haven’t seen any further action on that from the FDA, so this is something that could be taken up by states such as California, who have the prerogative to advance those kinds of rules themselves. Regulating product standards is an important strategy, but we have seen less come to fruition in that area.

“Among the lowest-income populations in the United States, we’ve seen little decline in the rate of smoking over the past 30 years.”

Where we’re seeing a lot of impact is around the accessibility of tobacco products: Four years ago, the legal age to purchase tobacco products went from 18 to 21.

Another thing that shouldn’t be overlooked is a dramatic decrease in the use of traditional combusted cigarettes, particularly among youth. Kids who might have smoked 15 or 20 years ago now are vaping instead. That’s not a perfect outcome but presents a lower health risk for those individuals than might have been the case. So we’ve seen a dramatic change in the tobacco landscape with regard to the products used and preferred by young people.

Does that mean the tobacco companies are still making profits with e-cigarettes?

Yes and no. Not all cigarette manufacturers have found a way to pivot to the sale of e-cigarettes — at least in the United States. But the bigger companies, Philip Morris and RJ Reynolds, for example, seem to be increasingly attracted to the idea that nicotine vaping products are the way forward, at least in countries like the United States. In low- and middle-income countries, there’s relatively little interest in moving in that direction. The evidence suggests they’re selling more cigarettes in those countries than they’ve ever sold in the past.

What is the broad trend right now? My understanding is that smoking is down in the U.S.

In the United States and many developed countries, we’re seeing year-over-year declines in the prevalence of smoking, most particularly among younger populations. In Massachusetts, 1 percent or less of high school students smoke cigarettes — that doesn’t include those vaping.

But among the lowest-income populations in the United States, we’ve seen little decline in the rate of smoking over the past 30 years. People who live in federally subsidized housing, for example, smoke at perhaps four times the rate of the general public. People with substance use disorders and mental health disorders smoke at a vastly greater prevalence than the general population. People who’ve been historically oppressed — for example, people of gender and sexual minority — smoke at much greater rates than the general population.

In other parts of the world, it’s very different. We haven’t seen the same impact from tobacco control interventions. There are higher rates of smoking among men in some countries, among both men and women in others.

Optimistically, we may see improvements in many global regions in the near future, as tobacco control initiatives are put in place, as high excise taxes are implemented, as clean indoor air laws are implemented, as restrictions on marketing and advertising go into effect. These all reduce demand for tobacco. So regulations really do matter. These battles need to be fought until the public is no longer being harmed by these products.


Seeing is believing

Personal and global history made Jeremy Weinstein want to change the world. As dean of the Kennedy School, he’s found the perfect place to do it.


Jeremy Weinstein.

Harvard Kennedy School Dean Jeremy Weinstein.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Campus & Community

Seeing is believing

Personal and global events made Jeremy Weinstein want to change the world. As dean of the Kennedy School, he’s found the perfect place to do it.

long read

A series focused on the personal side of Harvard research and teaching.

The ruins of apartheid were still smoldering in 1995 when Jeremy Weinstein stepped off a plane in South Africa. A former political prisoner named Nelson Mandela had become president months earlier and the country’s new constitution was still being drafted.

It was a period of hope in a nation whose racist policies had made it an international pariah. But it was also a time of challenge. After a decades-long struggle against white minority rule, once-disenfranchised South Africans had to shift from protest to citizenship, from tearing down an unjust system to building up equality for all.

“There’s this extraordinary moment of change in a country that, like the United States, has race and identity as a critical feature of its makeup and also structural inequality, both in an economic sense and in a political sense,” Weinstein said. “And I thought, ‘Maybe there’s something really important for me to learn from what’s unfolding in South Africa.’”

During his nine months in the country, Weinstein lived with a local family in the township of Gugulethu, took classes at the University of the Western Cape, and nurtured a newhigh school pilot initiative in democracy and public service. The program’s aim was to foster citizenship among youth born as second-class citizens in a divided nation, but who would mature into full participants in South Africa’s new democracy.

“It’s no surprise, given the kind of environment that I was growing up in, that my eyes were open to lots of things around me that I wouldn’t have otherwise seen.”

Jeremy Weinstein

Weinstein, who started as dean of Harvard Kennedy School in July, remembers that seminal moment in one nation’s history as inseparable from his own development as a scholar and a person. In some ways, his upbringing had primed him for his time in South Africa to make a significant impact on his worldview. He had been sensitized to the power of government for both good and ill by a tragedy that destroyed his grandfather’s life. He had been exposed to lively political discussions at the dining room table, where colleagues and graduate students of his academic parents visited regularly. And he had become alert to inequality through the stark differences between his comfortable life in Palo Alto, California, and the struggle for economic security and safety he saw nearby, in East Palo Alto, a town with almost the same name, he observed, but one in which life couldn’t have been more different.

“It’s no surprise, given the kind of environment that I was growing up in, that my eyes were open to lots of things around me that I wouldn’t have otherwise seen,” he said.

‘Case’ tragedy

Weinstein grew up the son of a psychologist mother who was a professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and a psychiatrist father who served as director of student health at Stanford University. His mother’s passion as a researcher was whether teachers’ beliefs about the ability of their students affected the students’ educational outcomes and how to create classrooms where all could thrive. His father’s passion was “The Case.”

Weinstein’s grandfather, Lou Weinstein, was once a prosperous Canadian businessman. In middle age, Lou experienced a series of panic attacks and a bout of anxiety. After consulting with a psychiatrist, was admitted to a psychiatric institution. Over four years, he was hospitalized a total of four times and emerged from his treatments diminished and broken.

“He came back from his hospitalizations a different person, lost his business, lost his identity, lost a lot of basic functioning,” Weinstein said. “My dad was a teenager at the time and became a psychiatrist to figure out what happened to his father.”

In the 1970s, news articles appeared about a CIA program called MKUltra, whose aim was to develop mind-control techniques to be used in interrogation during the Cold War. Among the participating physicians was Donald Ewen Cameron, a psychiatrist who led, at various times, the Canadian Psychiatric Association, the American Psychiatric Association, and the World Psychiatric Association. He was also the doctor who admitted and treated Weinstein’s grandfather.

Cameron’s experiments on unwitting subjects included high doses of PCP and LSD, drug-induced sleep for months on end, and repeated electroshock treatments intended to break down existing behavior patterns. The treatments also included sensory deprivation with the playback of verbal messages to imprint new behavioral triggers for up to 24 hours per day over three months.

“It clicked for my father when he saw a New York Times story and learned what MKUltra was,” Weinstein said. “He realized that this is what, potentially, happened to his dad. It became his life’s work for more than a decade to bring to the public eye what had happened and seek justice for his father.”

“The Case,” as the Weinsteins called it, brought an array of extraordinary people into the family’s orbit, including Joseph Rauh, a noted civil rights lawyer who led Lou’s lawsuit against the CIA.

Evidence was difficult to obtain and the case dragged through the 1980s. Files were classified or had been destroyed, forcing Lou and other plaintiffs in the lawsuit to settle. The justice that might have emerged from a public trial was denied, but one ancillary result was the impact of the ordeal on Weinstein’s home. He grew up in a place where ethics, justice, and politics weren’t theoretical and remote, but rather personal, affecting the people he loved.

“This case was emblematic of what happens when a government loses sight of its obligations to those that it represents, loses sight of the dignity of individuals, loses sight of a commitment to civil rights and civil liberties,” Weinstein said. “It’s painful to think about Guantanamo Bay. It’s painful to think about the wars after 9/11 and the Abu Ghraib prison. It’s painful to think about how these patterns of gross injustice at the hands of government have ways of repeating themselves over time.”

Real-world experience

The summer after enrolling at Swarthmore College, Weinstein headed to Washington, where he worked on the founding of AmeriCorps, a national service program launched by President Bill Clinton to address unmet needs in disadvantaged communities.

While in D.C., Weinstein heard about an opportunity in the new democracy taking root in South Africa. Leaders in the African National Congress were enthusiastic about establishing pilot programs to promote national service. He jumped at the chance, with support from a Swarthmore scholarship.

After he arrived, Weinstein began teaching a course on democracy at a local high school. To enrich the student experience, he arranged public service internships with government organizations and nonprofit partners. Teaching was an energizing experience for Weinstein, but the biggest impact came from his experiences outside the classroom. Weinstein became close with a student and activist named Malala Ndlazi, who was also studying at the University of the Western Cape. Ndlazi wasn’t shy about his belief that the deal ending apartheid was a bad one. It didn’t go far enough in redistributing wealth and resources, he said.

Weinstein and his friend, Malala Ndlazi, during his time in South Africa.
Weinstein and his friend, Malala Ndlazi, during his time in South Africa.

“Almost every night it was me and Malala in the back of the house talking about this moment of extraordinary change,” Weinstein recalled. “I was living in a society that was negotiating the terms of its own constitution — not in the 1700s but in the 1990s — with everything that the democratic project had experienced over hundreds of years about who has voice, who’s included, how you design mechanisms of accountability, how you preserve the rights of individuals but also take advantage of the potential good that government can do, how you think about issues of redistribution. All of these things were being negotiated in real time every day, being contested in the streets, and talked about in the cafes.”

Weinstein threw himself into life in Gugulethu, seeking to build relationships and get to know the community. He ate dinners with his host family and joined a local basketball team. Though Jewish, he attended services with his host family at the Seventh Day Adventists church on Saturday and headed to Catholic Mass with Ndlazi on Sundays.  

In September 1995, Weinstein returned to Swarthmore for his junior year. The young person who had been attuned to injustice at home had had his eyes opened to the breadth of the problem globally and the role government might play in remedying it. He studied politics and economics and wrote an honors thesis on Kenya’s struggle for democracy. After graduating, he headed to the Harvard Kennedy School, a place he believed would nurture his dual interests in scholarship and policy.

After his first year in graduate school, Weinstein spent the summer of 1998 working at the National Security Council in Washington, energized by the prospect of peaceful post-Cold War transitions from authoritarian to democratic rule in Africa. Instead, the council’s four-person Africa team faced a summer of unrest: a border war between Ethiopia and Eritrea, an invasion of the Democratic Republic of the Congo by Rwanda and Uganda, embassy bombings in Kenya and Tanzania, and U.S. military strikes in Sudan.

“Africa was very much on the president’s agenda every week, but not because of progress toward democracy and economic growth,” Weinstein said. “Africa was on the agenda because we were dealing with the emergence of conflicts and instability that were associated with this moment of tremendous transition in the region.”

‘Inside Rebellion’

In the summer of 1999, Weinstein returned to Africa. In Zimbabwe, he interviewed people about the country’s military intervention in the DRC. In Zambia, he visited refugee camps on the DRC and Angolanborders.

“Many of these revolutionary movements and even governments purported to speak for citizens, purported to be for things that people wanted,” he said. “Yet tens of thousands of people were fleeing, walking 1,000 kilometers with their most valuable possessions — a sewing machine for one family — on their back. I would go house to house or tent to tent, asking people about why they left to understand what their experience had been of the conflict coming to their community: what the insurgents said about what they were doing, what violence they experienced, and why they made the decision to leave.”

That experience led to his dissertation on rebel violence against civilians. Published in 2007 as a book, “Inside Rebellion: The Politics of Insurgent Violence,” the work explored why some revolutionary movements commit horrific acts of violence againstcivilians and others do not. It was the product of 18 months in the field, traveling alone or with a local graduate student as a research assistant. Living out of a backpack, Weinstein interviewed ordinary people and former fighters. Some of the revolutionaries — such as Uganda’s National Resistance Army — were now leaders of a recognized government. In Mozambique, they were less prominent, settling for peace in an agreement that fell short of the goals for which they’d fought.

Peru was different for a number of reasons. It was the sole location Weinstein visited outside of Africa and the only country whose revolutionaries — the Shining Path — were still active. It was also the only place he encountered trouble.

Weinstein first spent time in Lima, interviewing former rebels in prison and those who had fought them on behalf of the government. From there he traveled to the countryside, where he interviewed ex-fighters and civilians in Ayacucho and illegal cocoa growers in the upper Huallaga Valley, where Shining Path remnants remained active. Late one evening, Weinstein heard a knock on his door.

“It was my research assistant, who had gotten word that the Shining Path was aware of my presence and unhappy with it,” Weinstein said. “We left in the middle of the night.”

The pair took a late bus back to Lima and remained in the capital for several weeks, wrapping up their work.

Weinstein saw a pattern in the numerous accounts he’d collected for “Inside Rebellion.” A key factor in insurgencies, he wrote, is the availability of external resources, such as mining wealth or foreign support. Groups that are able to tap that wealth to build their armies act more coercively toward local populations because they are less dependent on them. Revolutionary groups without those resources are forced to use persuasion rather than coercion.

“It is unusual for someone writing a dissertation to do in-depth fieldwork in three different places, but it’s also one of the things that made the book so convincing,” said Stephen Walt, the Kennedy School’s Robert and Renee Belfer Professor of International Affairs, who was a member of Weinstein’s dissertation committee.

“Indeed, it was necessary to show that the theory could explain not just one type of rebel organization but other types as well. None of these were places where it was easy to do research, and Jeremy deserves a lot of credit for persistence, audacity, and dedication.”

‘Uniquely inspirational’

Weinstein’s first academic job after earning his Ph.D. was as an assistant professor at Stanford, where his work on violence, war, and post-conflict transition continued. He returned several times to Africa as a researcher and became an adviser to the first Obama campaign for the White House. After the 2008 election, he joined the administration as director for democracy and development at the National Security Council. His time in the White House spanned several posts — including chief of staff and then deputy to Ambassador Samantha Power at the U.S. Mission to the United Nations — and numerous international crises, including the Arab Spring, the Ebola epidemic, the Syrian civil war, Russia’s 2014 invasion of Ukraine, and the Iran nuclear deal.

“He proved to be someone who brought this unusual, encyclopedic, academic rigor — the best of academia — and leveraged it to be useful in the meeting, in the moment of crisis, in the strategic review, in the bilateral dialogue,” said Power, a former Harvard faculty member who today is the administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development.

“Jeremy can see a blank slate and have a vision for what’s to be planted there or what should be built there.”

Samantha Power

“Jeremy has an uncanny ability to see what is not there,” she said. “I might see what is there and it might frustrate me and I’ll try to fix or amend or do away with it. Jeremy can see a blank slate and have a vision for what’s to be planted there or what should be built there. It’s very, very unusual.”

In the years to come, Weinstein, back at Stanford, would refocus on key topics he’d wrestled with while in D.C.

The Syrian Civil War had sent refugees fleeing the country and sparked a crisis that eventually included migrants from Africa, Afghanistan, and elsewhere. With colleagues, Weinstein co-led Stanford’s Immigration Policy Lab, focusing on how best to promote immigrant and refugee integration and the role of national policies in shaping patterns of migration.

With the tech revolution well underway, more undergraduates were entering computer science and related fields, and Weinstein again saw what was not there: instruction in social science, ethics, and public policy that would influence how young computer scientists designed applications, programs, and devices that would influence lives far beyond Silicon Valley. He collaborated with colleagues in philosophy and computer science on teaching and writing projects, and co-authored the 2021 book “System Error: Where Big Tech Went Wrong and How We Can Reboot.”

In addition to his work on immigration and tech, Weinstein co-founded the Stanford Impact Labs, which grew out of his belief that walls between academic disciplines and between researchers and practitioners hinder problem-solving. The initiative brought to the social sciences a research and development approach familiar from engineering and the life sciences, investing in collaborative teams of researchers and practitioners. The organization also launched a fellowship program to help faculty members pursue their ambitions for impact beyond their scholarly contributions. It also created a public service sabbatical to provide faculty the opportunity to embed in nonprofits and in government to better understand how they might contribute to solving major social problems.

Fundamental to Weinstein’s academic achievements is his ability to learn and apply new knowledge, to inspire, and to see across disciplines, traits that will suit him well in his new role, Power said.

“I think that that cross-pollination throughout his career has been what has defined him,” Power said. “Despite the many challenges facing the world right now, Jeremy is a uniquely inspirational person in reminding people of the good that they can do. No matter what the odds are, he finds a way to convince you — you have a chance of making a huge difference.”

Weinstein said that the chance to return to the Kennedy School, an institution at the intersection of scholarship and practice — a place where he can learn, teach, and above all be useful — was irresistible.

“It represents everything I have tried to pursue as a scholar and policymaker,” Weinstein said. “The extraordinary thing about this institution is that it attracts people, whatever role or function they have, who are motivated by problems in the world that they want to solve and believe that universities have an essential role to play.”


Real reason ACL injury rate is higher for women athletes

Study finds flaw in key sports science metric


Science & Tech

Real reason ACL injury rate is higher for women athletes

Woman holding her knee
5 min read

Study finds flaw in key sports science metric

Amid news coverage of the 2023 Women’s World Cup, researchers with Harvard’s GenderSci Lab spotted a familiar narrative concerning rampant ACL tears.

There was an immediate attribution of women athletes’ disproportionately high injury rates to biological sex differences, remembered Sarah S. Richardson, Aramont Professor of the History of Science and professor of studies of women, gender, and sexuality. “Do women’s hormonal cycles mean that their ligaments are more likely to tear? Does their hip structure mean that their knees are not meant for a certain level of activity?”

In a new study in the British Journal of Sports Medicine, Richardson and her co-authors cast doubt upon explanations that rely solely on sex-linked biology. The researchers specifically homed in on “athlete-exposures,” a metric widely used in the field of sports science — and repeated without question by many journalists covering women’s higher rates of ACL injury. The popular measure embeds bias into the science, the researchers say, because it fails to account for different resources allotted to male and female athletes. They find women may face a greater risk of anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury because they play on smaller teams and spend a greater share of time in active competition.

“We knew from previous research that the real story is usually a complex entanglement of social factors with biology,” said Richardson, who founded the GenderSci Lab in 2018. “Our goal was to elevate the consideration that social factors can contribute to these disparities — and to show that it matters quantitatively in the numbers.”

Sports science literature reviewed by the research team included a recent meta-analysis, which arrived at an ACL injury rate 1.7 times higher for female athletes. Most of the 58 studies cited by the meta-analysis calculated athlete-exposures rather simply: the number of athletes on a given team multiplied by total number of games and practices. Exposure was rarely calculated at the individual level. Nor was weight given to time spent in active competition, when injuries are up to 10 times likelier to occur.  

Example of the impact of men’s and women’s ice hockey roster size on calculated exposure time, injury rate, and injury risk. This figure represents one men’s and one women’s team participating in one 60-minute ice hockey match, in which six players per team are allowed on the ice at a given time and unlimited substitutions are allowed.

Example of the impact of men’s and women’s ice hockey roster size on calculated exposure time, injury rate, and injury risk. This figure represents one men’s and one women’s team participating in one 60-minute ice hockey match, in which six players per team are allowed on the ice at a given time and unlimited substitutions are allowed.

Source: Limitations of athlete-exposures as a construct for comparisons of injury rates by gender/sex: a narrative review, British Journal of Sports Medicine

A systematic analysis revealed the folly of this approach. “For every match that a team plays, a women’s team will, on average, train less compared to men,” explained co-author Ann Caroline Danielsen, a Ph.D. candidate studying social epidemiology at the T.H. Chan School of Public Health. “This is significant not only because injuries are more likely to happen during matches. It’s also true that optimal conditioning helps prevent injuries from happening in the first place.”

Underinvestment in women’s sports also means lower rates of participation, with playing time distributed among smaller numbers of athletes. “If you look at one individual woman ice hockey player, for example, her risk of injury is going to be larger than a man who’s playing on a much larger team,” noted co-author Annika Gompers ’18, a former Crimson runner now pursuing her Ph.D. in epidemiology at Emory University. “At the same time, the actual rate of injury per unit of game time is exactly the same.”

Recommendations for more accurately calculating ACL injury risk include careful considerations of structural factors. “We wish, for example, there was more systematic data on inequities in the quality of facilities,” said Gompers, noting the high-profile example of the NCAA’s 2021 March Madness basketball tournament. Also helpful would be better numbers on each player’s access to physical therapists, massage therapists, and coaching staff.

Sarah S. Richardson (left), Annika Gompers, and Ann Caroline Danielsen.

Photo by Dylan Goodman

But the co-authors also call for improving the very metric used to calculate ACL injury rates. That means disaggregating practice time from game time and specifying each player’s training-to-competition ratio. It means gauging athlete-exposures at the individual level. It also means controlling for team size.

The paper is the first in the GenderSci Lab’s Sex in Motion initiative, a new research program promising thorough investigations into how sex-related variables interact with social gendered variables to produce different outcomes in musculoskeletal health. Its fourth co-author is U.K. sports sociologist Sheree Bekker, who led a 2021 paper that called for greater attention to social inequities in approaching ACL injury prevention.

“There’s a deep story here, and a nice case study, of how gender can be built into the very measures that we use in biomedicine,” Richardson said. “If the athlete-exposures construct is obscuring or even effacing those gendered structures, we’re not able to accurately perceive the places for intervention — and individuals are not able to accurately perceive their level of risk.”


Exact cause of Notre-Dame fire still unclear. But disaster perhaps could’ve been avoided.

Leadership expert says foreseeable factors all contributed to complex failure. Consistent focus needed on best practices, rules, procedures.


View of the scaffolding and damaged Notre-Dame Cathedral after the fire in Paris, April 16, 2019.

View of the scaffolding and damaged Notre-Dame Cathedral after the fire in Paris, April 16, 2019.

Christophe Ena/AP Photo

Nation & World

Exact cause of Notre-Dame fire still unclear. But disaster perhaps could’ve been avoided.

7 min read

Leadership expert says foreseeable factors all contributed to complex failure. Consistent focus needed on best practices, rules, procedures.

Notre-Dame Cathedral re-opened to worldwide acclaim last weekend after a massive fire ravaged the Parisian landmark in April 2019. French authorities still have not been able to pinpoint an exact cause for the fire, but a new analysis may provide insights into how to avoid such a catastrophe.

The beloved Gothic cathedral, built from wood, limestone, iron, and lead in 1163 along the banks of the Seine, was long the city’s top tourist attraction and the site of many iconic events in French political and literary history. Reconstruction and restoration, from spire to sanctuary, cost an estimated ₵700 million, or about $740 million.       

While an official cause has yet to the determined, a new Harvard Business School case study examines the complicated series of mishaps and operational breakdowns that allowed a small roof fire to become a catastrophic blaze. The Gazette spoke to Amy Edmondson, co-author of the case study and Novartis Professor of Leadership and Management at HBS, about what the fire has to teach us about preventing such disasters. Interview has been edited for clarity and length.

Notre-Dame Cathedral at its reopening, Dec. 8, 2024.

The Notre-Dame Cathedral reopened more than five years after a fire brought the entire Gothic masterpiece within minutes of collapsing.

Jeanne Accorsini/SIPA via AP Images.


Why were you interested in the Notre Dame fire for a case study?

Jérôme Barthelemy, a professor at ESSEC Business School in France, reached out to me to ask whether I was interested in co-authoring a case on the fire with him. I said yes, because, for me, this was a quintessential complex failure. I just wrote a book called “Right Kind of Wrong: The Science of Failing Well” in which I identify three kinds of failure — basic, complex and intelligent.

The “right kind of wrong” refers to intelligent failures, which are the undesired results of thoughtful experiments. But complex failures are a fact of life, and they are a phenomenon that when we are at our very best as individuals, but more importantly, as organizations, we can prevent. My research is about what more can we do to prevent tragic events like this, failures like this.

You delineate a number of poor decisions and troubling actions that may have contributed to the fire’s size and destruction. Five years later, why do you think French authorities still have no definitive answer on the cause?

I don’t know for sure. I know only what we could learn from published sources. With that in mind, I think the cause will likely remain elusive, because multiple factors — multiple culprits, if you will — were present. Multiple deviations from best practice are highlighted in the case — everything from workers smoking to a confusing fire code system to a built-in 20-minute delay between a call and the arrival of firefighters in the best of circumstances.

As with all complex failures, contributing factors interacted in complex ways. Identifying a single cause is rarely the best way to think about these kinds of failures. Every one of the small factors, like the workers smoking on the roof or storing electrical equipment near very old wood or doing hot work in the vicinity of the rafters, the way the fire alarm and warning system was set up, and the built-in delay is a potential contributing factor.

I can say confidently that it was devastating to all of those involved, both inside and outside the organization. So, they should be motivated to make changes, but identifying a definitive answer is unlikely.

Given that complex failures are caused by a set of contributing factors, rather than one factor, it can be difficult to motivate change. What I argue in the book is that complex failures are on the rise because of the complexity of our systems. But they are theoretically and practically preventable. And the only way to prevent them is through vigilance — absolute commitment to best practices, a dedication to getting the little things right, all of them.

This is not as expensive or laborious as it might sound. It is about a habit of excellence, driven by the belief that rules and procedures matter, and deviations can escalate in dangerous ways. It’s far more expensive and laborious to clean up a failure like this than to run a tight ship, so to speak.

“Complex failures are on the rise because of the complexity of our systems. But they are theoretically and practically preventable.”

Amy Edmondson. Photo by Evgenia Eliseeva.
Photo by Evgenia Eliseeva

Could the fire have been avoided or done far less damage if one or two of these particular things had not occurred?

Yes, and that’s characteristic of complex failure. Often, all you need is to remove one or two of these contributing factors, and the failure is prevented. For example, if you didn’t have the fire department showing up 20 minutes after the call, you’d probably catch the fire before it turns into a devastatingly large fire. If you had very strict rules about where the electrical equipment goes, where smoking happens, etc. Take out any one of these factors, and it might have been a different outcome. I can’t tell you which, because we don’t really know.

More than 30 years ago, I was studying DuPont, which conducted multiple high-risk manufacturing activities but nonetheless had an extraordinary safety record, to understand how it worked. And I discovered that people in the company wouldn’t let an executive walk down the stairs without holding the banister; if you did that, you’d get reprimanded. You couldn’t walk around with an open coffee cup. No one at any level would put their key in the ignition of the car until they heard the click of each seatbelt. It was almost second nature.

Now, these seem downright silly. But their belief was: “Watch out for the little stuff.” If you apply that logic to the factory, if you aspire to have everything as close to excellent as possible, you can avoid the tragic perfect storms that cause complex failures.

You study leadership. Was this a failure of leadership?

Yes. By definition, leaders are accountable for the whole. Even if you could say, “Well, I didn’t do it; I didn’t smoke in the rafters.” Well, that is not quite right. As a leader, you did do it. You led in a way that allowed such deviations to occur. Sins of omission are every bit as important as the actual acts that may have contributed to the fire.

What issues do you want students to grapple with from this case study?

Exactly what we’re talking about. First, I want them to understand the difference between a basic failure — with a single, simple cause — and a complex failure, and then to take a close look at the organizational factors, which means managerial factors that allow such failures to happen. And then, I want them to think about what the leader’s role is: what they need to put in place to run an excellent operation. The lesson is that leaders can insist on the discipline and the vigilance needed to prevent complex failures.

Improbably, the building has been carefully restored in record time. Do you think anything else positive can come out of this situation or this tragedy?

Yes. The thing that’s positive that will, I hope, come out of it is that other important landmarks will be less vulnerable. This tragedy was a wake-up call for anyone who has responsibility for an important and fragile landmark, or any public good like a national park or even human safety in a complex operation. The insights do not apply only to ancient cathedrals.

Anytime you are leading or in charge of an important resource, especially anything related to human life, you have a responsibility for being vigilant and thoughtful, and encouraging voice, and for stress-testing your hypotheses rigorously. I think there’s a lot of prevention insight that comes from this case, and because of the emotional nature of that loss, it gets people’s attention and could make a difference in that way.


Can people change?

One thing is certain in the new year — we’ll evolve, with or without resolutions. In podcast, experts consider our responsibility.


Person pushing an arrow in the opposite direction.

Illustration by Gary Waters/Ikon Images

Science & Tech

‘Harvard Thinking’: Can people change?

One thing is certain in the new year — we’ll evolve, with or without resolutions. In podcast, experts consider our responsibility.

long read

Nothing is certain except death and taxes, the saying goes — but there’s another sure thing to add to that list: change.

“The more we resist change, the more we suffer. There’s a phrase I like. It says, ‘Let go or be dragged,’” said Robert Waldinger, a professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School and the director of the Harvard Study on Adult Development, one of the longest-running studies on human happiness and well-being.

As humans, we are constantly changing. Sometimes change is pursued intentionally, when we set goals, for example. But change also happens subconsciously, and not always for the better. Richard Weissbourd, a lecturer at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and director of Making Caring Common, said that disillusionment is often underappreciated as a factor in change.

“People can respond to disillusionment by becoming bitter and withdrawing — and cynical,” he said. “They can also respond to disillusionment by developing a more encompassing understanding of reality and thriving.”

Mahzarin Banaji, an experimental psychologist who researches implicit beliefs, said that even our biases can change over time as we experience new circumstances. It’s one reason why it’s important we do not lose agency when it comes to changing ourselves.

In this episode of “Harvard Thinking,” host Samantha Laine Perfas talks with Waldinger, Weissbourd, and Banaji about the value of embracing change.

Transcript

Robert Waldinger: The more we resist change, the more we suffer. There’s a phrase I like. It says, “Let go or be dragged.” There is just constant movement of the universe and all of us as individuals as part of the universe.

Samantha Laine Perfas: You can’t teach an old dog new tricks, goes the saying, and sometimes this feels true. But the idea that people can’t change is a myth. Research shows that people are capable of making dramatic shifts at nearly every stage of life in spite of our habits and biases.

So how much of that change is within our control and how much is at the mercy of our circumstances?

Welcome to “Harvard Thinking,” a podcast where the life of the mind meets everyday life. Today, we’re joined by:

Mahzarin Banaji: Mahzarin Banaji. I’m an experimental psychologist. I live and work in the Department of Psychology at Harvard University.

Laine Perfas: Her work focuses on implicit bias, and she co-wrote the best-seller “Blindspot: Hidden Biases of Good People.” Next:

Waldinger: Bob Waldinger. I’m professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School

Laine Perfas: He also directs the Harvard Study on Adult Development, one of the longest-running studies on human happiness and well-being. It tracks the lives of participants over 80 years. And finally:

Richard Weissbourd: Rick Weissbourd. I’m a senior lecturer at the Grad School of Education. I’ve also taught at the Kennedy School of Government for many years.

Laine Perfas: He’s a psychologist and is the director of the Making Caring Common Project at GSE.

And I’m Samantha Laine Perfas, your host, and a writer for The Harvard Gazette. Today, we’ll discuss how, when, and why we change, intentionally and otherwise.

It feels like we live in a culture that is constantly pushing us to do more, be more. Why do we focus on changing ourselves so much?

Waldinger: What’s so striking is that for a long time, developmental scientists focused almost exclusively on children, because children change so dramatically, right before our eyes. And people thought once we got into our 20s, we found work, if we were lucky we found love, and then we were good to go, we were set, and people didn’t change much across adulthood. People began to look more closely and look at their own experience and realize how much change happens psychologically and biologically across the adult lifespan. And so you began to see the kinds of studies of change across adulthood that my study represents that was begun in 1938. But for a long time, adult development was the kind of poor stepchild of developmental science.

Banaji: Psychologists, I think, have been remiss in really studying the two ends of life, right? As Bob said, because we are interested in development for a variety of reasons, we focus on from the day a baby is born and we go through, really, well, the adolescent years because we’re interested in the emotional mind and what happens, the volatility during adolescence, and change and so on. And then we know nothing until again, we get to a much older age where we worry and think about the last decade of life. But every decade we’re changing. We’re entirely different people.

Weissbourd: There’s so many different domains of change, right? And I think we do have a pretty strong belief in our culture that we can become more effective or competent, that we can become happier. There’s a billion-dollar self-help industry out there that is trying to make people feel better.

My work is primarily on moral development, and I don’t think we have strong notions of change in adult life, and that’s a real problem. There’s a notion in many parts of the country that you’re born good or bad, and you’re going to be good or bad your whole life, and I think we’d be a much healthier culture if we saw ourselves as having the capacity to love other people well and more deeply and empathize more deeply. You can have better relationships. And that’s probably the strongest source of happiness we have.

I would just say one other thing, and it’s really partly a question for all of you. But, I think sometimes people don’t think they change because the narrator doesn’t change. Meaning the person, the thing telling the story of their lives doesn’t feel like it changes. And when I ask people about their narrator, do they have the same narrator when they were 8 or 16 or 30 or 50? Most people think the narrator is the same. So if you think of the narrator as the self and the continuity of the self, I think that’s one of the reasons people often think we’re not changing.

Banaji: I’m remembering my good friend Walter Mischel’s theory of personality and this idea that we believe so much that we and other people are largely consistent across different situations. The lovely example that Walter gives is that we meet people in certain roles so we don’t even know the variability of those people. I know the janitor who stops by my office every evening as a janitor, I don’t know him as a father or as a jazz musician or whatever else. These things give us a false sense of continuity. And I think this spills over into feeling change isn’t present or happening when in fact it is. It’s like our skin. I think I’m right that the epidermis, once a month, we have a new skin and even in older people, it’s only a little slower. It’s every two months. But I don’t notice that and that might be an interesting metaphor for us, that something so close to us on our body that we see all the time is going through an entire regeneration every month, but we don’t notice it.

Waldinger: It’s interesting because I think we’re ambivalent about change, that the mind in many ways craves permanence. Rick, as you’re saying, we have this sense of the narrator being the same narrator when I was 8 years old and now when I’m in my 70s, and of course that’s absurd. I’m a Zen practitioner, and the core teachings of Zen and Buddhism is that the self is a fiction. It’s a helpful fiction that we construct to get through the world, but it’s actually fictitious, and constantly changing. But at the same time, as we want permanence, we want something fixed, we say, “Oh, I want to improve.” And so we get on this endless treadmill of self-improvement. So we really have quite a complex relationship with the idea of change, we human beings.

Weissbourd: I’m one of those people who do have a strong sense of self-sameness, that I am the same person when I was 8. Is that not true for you?

Waldinger: When I was 8, I really thought I could be Superman; and I had a cape and I had a Superman outfit, and I ran around and I jumped on and off my bed. I don’t do that anymore, Rick.

Laine Perfas: Maybe you should. Sounds like a great Saturday afternoon.

Banaji: You know, there’s a lovely piece that Robert Sapolsky, the neurobiologist, wrote, in, I think it was in the ’80s. I remember reading it and smiling because I was still in my 20s. And he said something like, “My research assistant colors his hair purple one week and green the other week. He listens to classical music and pop. He eats regular foods and weird foods.” And he said, “Look at me, I’ve had the same shoulder-length ponytail for the last 40 years and I only listen to reggae and so on.” And he concluded that piece by saying if you haven’t changed by a certain age for certain things, you never will. If you haven’t eaten sushi by the age of 22, you never will. If you haven’t had your nose pierced by 17, you never will. So there are certain things that, yes, it feels that way, but maybe there are bigger changes that happen later in life.

Waldinger: One thing that I’ve been impressed by as I study people getting older is that the big change is in our perception of the finiteness of life. That we all know we’re going to die from a pretty young age, but most of us say, “Ah, it’s way in the future” or “I’m going to be the exception here. I won’t die. Everybody else will.” And then what Laura Carstensen’s work shows, and many people’s, is that in about our mid-40s, we really begin to get a more visceral sense of the finiteness of life and that sense of our mortality increases from the mid-40s onward. You can document it pretty precisely and that institutes a whole set of shifts in how we see ourselves, how we see this narrator moving through the world, and how we see our time horizon. There are some things that are going to change just because of the fact of death.

Laine Perfas: It does seem like some people are very open to change, and they’re constantly learning and growing, But then there are other people who are very comfortable with how they are, even if other people maybe think they should change. It makes me wonder, are there some people who are more susceptible to change than others, or more open to it?

Banaji: As with almost any other psychological physical property, yes, there are individual differences and far be it for me to bring up anything political in this moment. But one of the differences between what we consider to be liberal versus conservative, the dictionary definition, is that one group looks forward and wants change and wants to leave behind old ways of doing things. And the other wants tradition and stability. There’s nothing good or bad here. These are both forces. But this is a real difference, I think, in almost every culture. I was born and raised in India, I’ve lived most of my adult life here, and in both cultures, I’ve seen these two big movements pull and push in opposite directions. And I guess at some level, I’d like to think theoretically that it’s good to have a bit of that pull and push.

Waldinger: And as I understand it, there’s some theory and some grounding in empirical data that some of this may be biologically based, that some of us are temperamentally more inclined to resist change. We humans are arrayed on a spectrum, perhaps even biologically, about how much we welcome versus resist change.

Banaji: I can’t help but mention my colleague Jerry Kagan. Jerry’s notion of temperament in early childhood, he had this view that there were certain personality dimensions that are biologically present in early childhood. And I really believe that some of those very much link up to what you’re saying, Bob. So for example, I have a sister who was very shy, anxious, would hold my little frock and hang behind me. And I was so extroverted that at age 6, I wanted to leave home and go off somewhere else. And I feel that this difference in shyness or anxiety or whatever you want to call it, has played a role in our political beliefs. I am open to new experiences. I meet very different people and packed a bag at 21 and with $40 in my pocket took off without knowing anybody in this country. She wouldn’t leave home without thinking for three hours about what she’s going to do. And this does lead to very different outcomes.

Weissbourd: Yeah, there’s some people who are temperamentally very risk-averse and there are other people who are risk junkies.

Laine Perfas: It is worth mentioning, you know, not all change that we experience is desirable or beneficial. You know, if we encounter trauma or negative experiences, if you’ve been in a really bad breakup and the experience leaves you cynical and love-averse. When we’re going through life and we’re experiencing negative experiences that might push us to change ourselves in ways that might be more harmful or cause us to withdraw, how do we wrestle with that tension versus still being open to the world, not really knowing what might happen?

Waldinger: A lot of my clinical work is psychotherapy. That’s my specialty; actually, I still, every day, I see a couple of people in psychotherapy. And what you see is tremendous variability in people’s willingness, interest in, and ability to make internal shifts in how they see the world and how they experience themselves. And some of that, Sam, is based on what you’re describing, which is some people have had negative experiences that seem to have really baked in certain ways of experiencing themselves in the world and certain expectations of the world and of people as being reliable or not reliable, as being intentionally harmful or basically good.

Weissbourd: I would say that most of us experience disillusionment at some point in our lives. My dissertation was on the disillusionment of Vietnam veterans, but I think it’s a very common experience. And I think people can respond to disillusionment by becoming bitter and withdrawing and cynical. They can also respond to disillusionment by developing a more encompassing understanding of reality and thriving, flourishing in the world. We have huge literatures on grief and trauma and depression. We don’t really talk enough about disillusionment, and I think it’s a powerful experience for a lot of people.

Banaji: My colleague Steve Pinker is very fond of pointing out to us something that I think is true, that we may think that we are not changing for the good, but whether you look at women’s rights, whether you look at homicide rates, unemployment, other measures of the economy, happiness — if you take even a 20-year view on most of them, there’s improvement. If you take a 100- or 200-year view, there’s no question that there’s a lot of improvement. Yes, there are pockets where things are getting worse. I’ll put climate in that box and make sure that we don’t forget that. But on many of these things, we are improving. And I come from a country that got independence in ’47, and the remarkable changes I’ve seen over the course of my lifetime in India are just mind-boggling. But our aspirations, I think, for better, which is a very good thing, I think often lead us to not see real progress that has also been made.

Waldinger: And to your point, our cognitive bias that’s built in, our bias to pay more attention to what’s negative and to remember what’s negative longer than what’s positive. When we’re younger, that changes as we get older, but that cognitive bias makes us vulnerable to having this sense that everything’s falling apart and inflamed.

Banaji: I myself showed that bias. When we began to do research on implicit bias, I said to my students, don’t even bother looking for change in it. It’s not going to change. It’s implicit. It’s not controllable. That’s the nature of this beast. We can focus on changing people’s conscious attitudes, but this thing is not going to change, not in my lifetime, and I was completely and utterly wrong on that because even implicit bias, which is not easy to control, we’ve seen something like a 64 percent drop-off in anti-gay bias in a 14-year period. This alone is mind-boggling. How did our culture change so dramatically? How did we go from being so deeply religiously based, all sorts of social pressures, how did grandparents and parents change? All of this happened in a 14-year period, not just on what we say and the rights we’ve given a group of people, but way deep inside of us, our implicit bias has changed.

Weissbourd: Mahzarin, I love this work you’re doing. I’m wondering if you can answer your own question, though. How did this happen?

Banaji: You know, I have many hypotheses, but being an experimentalist makes it really difficult to test these because it doesn’t lend itself to laboratory tests. I think both of you doing the work you’ve done may have better hypotheses, so I would love to hear what they are, but I have a few. The first one is that sexuality had going for it a very positive feature, and that is that sexuality is embedded in all aspects of our society at all levels. There are gay and straight people and everybody in between on the coasts and in the middle of the country, among the rich and the poor, among the educated and the less-educated. I think that’s one of the reasons. I also think that these biases were based in religion, and I think we are becoming a less religious country. So I think perhaps secularism has a small role to play, but I think primarily we are not segregated by sexuality, the way we are on age, the way we are on race. And so I think that just allows for the possibility of change.

Waldinger: One of the things I’ve been impressed by is how powerful stories are. Personal stories, like my son says he’s gay and then, whoa, I’m rethinking a lot of things. But also some of the stories, many people have talked about the influence of media and stories, shows about gay people. And I think that those emotional connections and those very personal stories move us in ways. It’s often when a senator or a congressperson has someone in their family with a mental illness that finally there’s some movement that lessens some of the national policy stigmatization of mental illness. It’s because people have it in their own lives and see it in their own lives in a way.

Laine Perfas: We’ve been talking about the ways that we pursue change or people are open to change. I want to talk a little bit about the people who do not embrace change and who might even fear it.

Banaji: Think about Brexit and also some of what’s going on in this country around immigration and just how much the fear of the outsider has been easy to evoke. There’s certain fears that are just right below the surface. Thinking about groups. It is one of those that I think is a very powerful and easy way to say we don’t want change because it’s so easy to evoke the idea that these people who are not us are going to take our stuff. Somebody just wrote me a week ago and said, do you think there’s a difference between foreign tourists and immigrants? And I said, yes, tourists give us money and we fear that immigrants will take our money. And of course there is a difference. But even within them, there are words that we use. I think this distinction in the word has gone away. But when I was younger, I remember that the word emigre would often be used to refer to white high-status immigrants. And immigrant would be the word to refer to non-white, poorer people coming to our country. So even there, we distinguish to tell ourselves that they come in different kinds, and one is to be feared and the other not.

Waldinger: We also assign these groups who are not us, we assign them the characteristics that we fear are part of us, and we don’t want any part of. So those other people are greedy, those other people are dirty, whatever epithets we apply are often reflections of what we don’t want in ourselves, and we notice glimmers of in ourselves. And so to resist those outsiders, to resist changes that come from the outside, is also saying I’m not going to let this stuff loose.

Weissbourd: I think change also involves grief sometimes and loss, it means a new way of being and foregoing a way of being that’s been very familiar, and the relationships in an old way of being, that you can change in ways that make it so it’s hard to be close to your high school friends. Or you can change in ways that may threaten your romantic relationship.

Laine Perfas: What I was thinking about as I was listening to all of you talk, it’s a fear of the unknown. If I change in some way, I can’t fully predict what that life for me will look like. If it changes, will I even recognize it anymore? Who am I? Do I belong? Is there still a place for me in this new and different world? And I think sometimes that alone can be enough to be like, maybe I’ll just keep doing what I’m doing. It’s a lot to think about.

Banaji: So you’re right, Sam, in bringing this up, because I’ve been worried about a particular issue. You said people for whom their life may not be what they were expecting it to be or had hoped to be, and I think about the group “men” as going through this. Of course, the world still is male-dominated and so on. We just have to look at the disproportionate number of men in power. But I’ve been worried a lot about men being left behind. As somebody who studies bias, I look for it everywhere, especially in places where we would not think to look. And there is something going on in this country. I don’t know how magnified it is elsewhere. But today, 60 percent of college-going people are women. And very soon it will be 65 percent. I think this is terrible for the country. I really believe that we need to hold this to 50/50. It’s not good for the group, but it’s not good for society. In 20 years, I think we will be in a position where we will really regret not having paid attention to this. And it’s not just going to college. There’s just many shifts that are happening for men, that are not getting attention and that I believe should, and it’s a kind of a change, but it’s seemingly having a negative impact on a particular group.

Waldinger: Could you say a little more about that? To hear you say this is really interesting.

Banaji: There’s a book that was written recently, and I wish I were remembering his name, but the book’s name is “Of Boys and Men.”

Laine Perfas: Richard Reeves.

Banaji: Yes, at the Brookings Institute. That book really changed my thinking. I had been feeling this. I had been noticing it because I teach in a concentration, a major, at Harvard that has been slowly turning much more female. And so I began to worry about it because I wondered like, where are the men? Why aren’t they coming to psychology? So when I was the director of undergraduate studies, I started to just collect some back-of-the-envelope data. I said to my colleagues, I’m very concerned about this. I brought it up once in an APA meeting, this is the American Psychological Association group of chairs of psychology departments. And I was slapped down by men and women who said, sorry, we don’t want to worry about this. I was just stunned that we would say such a thing. What can I say? I just feel that there’s now enough evidence that men are saying they’re feeling they’re being left behind. The data are, certainly for college. Now, I know that college is not the be-all and end-all of life and not everybody needs to go to college and so on. But you and I know that going to college changes your life’s trajectory, the way our society is set up currently. It is a very strong path to success. And we’re taking that away from one group of people. To see this happening deserves some attention, in my opinion.

Laine Perfas: I know we’ve been talking at the society level, so I want to bring it a little bit back to the individual. Is it more common for people to change intentionally and purposefully, like they’re pursuing a change in their own life? Or is it more common that we change subconsciously or just simply because of the life experiences that we have?

Waldinger: I would argue it depends on how much pain we’re in. If you have a motivation to change, a conscious motivation, you’re more likely to take steps that are hard and require persistence. But to do that, if things are good, you’re probably not likely to make conscious, deliberate efforts to change because things are good.

Laine Perfas: That’s really interesting. It makes me think about this pursuit of happiness: I still feel unhappy, therefore I’m motivated to constantly keep changing, even though it never actually makes me happier sometimes.

Weissbourd: That’s the kicker, right? That’s the irony, that all the pursuit of happiness often makes you less happy. I certainly agree with Bob about suffering, but I might land differently on the question, just in the sense that I do feel like we’re always evolving, whether we intend to or not. Early adulthood changes you. Parenthood changes you. Midlife often changes people. Aging changes people. So there are inevitable developmental changes that are happening.

Laine Perfas: I was going to ask if we ever get to a point where it’s good to just accept who we are and how we are and to be OK with where we’re at in life.

Weissbourd: I think we have a lifelong responsibility to shield other people from our flaws.

Banaji: I love how you said that.

Waldinger: I also think there’s a distinction between the responsibility to keep trying to be better, to spare other people our worst aspects. And I totally agree with you, Rick. And on the other side, because I see this as a psychiatrist, is this problem of low self-esteem. The Dalai Lama, when he started having more contact with Westerners, said that one of the most striking things for him was that Westerners are much more commonly beset by low self-esteem and harsh self-criticism, much more than the people he encountered in Eastern cultures. Partly because self-esteem is an issue of self-absorption, particularly low self-esteem. And so I think it’s both. I think that we have a responsibility to be better, but that there is also a path to greater self-acceptance, which makes us much more fun to live with when we talk about other people.

Banaji: I never heard the phrase “self-esteem” until I was 24 and arrived in America. And yet there is a positive side to it that I want to point out, and I think this is true of maybe not even Western culture, but the United States. I think Alexis de Tocqueville said something in his book on “Democracy in America” that America was not a better country than other countries, but it had this magnificent ability of looking at its flaws. I feel that this is one of the things that I have loved about this culture. That there is something public about looking at our flaws. And I think it’s the mark of a culture that’s evolving in a very positive direction.

Laine Perfas: Thinking about the coming new year, ’tis the season for New Year’s resolutions and all of these dramatic statements of changes that people are going to make. I’m curious what you all think is beautiful about change and how it can have a healthy place in our lives as we think about changes we might want to make this upcoming year?

Waldinger: Zen perspective? Change is absolutely inevitable. Change is constant. Change is the only constant. And the more we resist change, the more we suffer. There’s a phrase I like, it says, “Let go or be dragged.” That there is just constant movement of the universe and of us as individuals as part of the universe. So I would say, it’s like gravity. It’s just here, it’s with us.

Banaji: But which direction it goes in, the change it’s going to have? That, I think, is for every single one of us to continue to try to shape as best as we see it. And I think in that sense, this year is going to be even more important than other years.

Laine Perfas: Thank you all for joining me for this really wonderful conversation today.

Waldinger: Yeah. What fun.

Laine Perfas: Thanks for listening. To find a transcript of this episode and to listen to all of our other episodes, visit harvard.edu/thinking. This episode was hosted and produced by me, Samantha Laine Perfas. It was edited by Ryan Mulcahy, Simona Covel, and Paul Makishima, with additional editing and production support from Sarah Lamodi. Original music and sound design by Noel Flatt. Produced by Harvard University, copyright 2024.



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Life stories with a beat you can dance to

Renowned actress and tap dancer Ayodele Casel premieres her autobiographical musical at A.R.T.


Campus & Community

Life stories with a beat you can dance to

Renowned actress and tap dancer Ayodele Casel.

Photo by Kevin Grady/Harvard Radcliffe Institute

5 min read

Renowned actress and tap dancer Ayodele Casel premieres her autobiographical musical at A.R.T. 

For Ayodele Casel, tap dancing is like a second language — or third, for the woman who grew up both in the Bronx and Puerto Rico. 

“It is a very improvisational form that is informed by your lived experience … where you grew up, the music you grew up listening to, the music that you respond to, the languages that you speak,” said Casel, 49, a renowned actress and dancer as well as a former Radcliffe fellow. “It’s power to communicate across like barriers of other languages or cultures.” 

Casel’s new production, “Diary of a Tap Dancer,” will have its premiere run Dec. 12-Jan. 4 at the American Repertory Theater. The play weaves together Casel’s unique brand of rhythmic tap with song and a narrative that traces her career as well as those of often forgotten female dancers throughout history. 

Casel recalls the first time she saw a tap performance. One of her high school teachers showed her video of a performance by Hollywood dancing legend Ginger Rogers alongside her equally famed partner Fred Astaire. 

“I just remember tunnel vision, like all of a sudden everything went away. And I was just looking at them float through the screen,” she said. “I thought, ‘Man, that is so cool!’”

Casel was hooked. She began immersing herself in classic movies that featured the form. 

But it wasn’t until she was at NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts that she actually tried it. In her sophomore year, she began studying tap under veteran dancer Charles Goddertz. She also befriended Baakari Wilder, a hoofer who would become famous for his starring role in the Tony-nominated musical “Bring in ’da Noise, Bring in ’da Funk.” 

As she watched hoofers like Wilder, she found herself increasingly drawn to it. Hoofing is a style of tap developed in African American communities that uses makes greater use of stomps and stamps to create unique and more expressive percussive rhythms. 

Casel says she was so taken with hoofing that she took the advice of other dancers and went to a construction site to get a piece of discarded plywood to use as a dancing surface so she could hear her rhythms more distinctly. (Cassel still recalls the hassle of getting her board on the subway to take it home.) 

The style still deeply influences Casel, who won the Hoofer Award from the American Tap Dance Foundation in 2017. 

In 2019, Casel brought her talents to Cambridge for the first time, becoming the 2019–2020 Frances B. Cashin Fellow at Radcliffe. At Harvard, Casel worked to put together an earlier version of “Diary” — one that was a one-woman history of female tappers. 

“The project I submitted was this idea of creating a theatrical work that centered the lives of the Black women tap dancers from the ’30s to the ’50s, whose stories aren’t widely known, and whose stories were almost really completely lost to history,” she said. 

“I just felt like as a woman of color in these tap shoes, that it was my responsibility to bring them with me so that as folks get to learn about me, they also inevitably learn about them,” she added. 

“I just felt like as a woman of color in these tap shoes, that it was my responsibility to bring them with me so that as folks get to learn about me, they also inevitably learn about them.”

Ayodele Casel

Tomiko Brown-Nagin, dean of the Harvard Radcliffe Institute, echoed the importance of uncovering the legacies of those history has forgotten. 

“It was here at Radcliffe that an early version debuted in February 2020,” she said. “More than just a theatrical work, ‘Diary’ contributes to a more complete history of a remarkable American art form by centering the lives of unnamed women within a broader context. I am eager to join so many others in the audience at the A.R.T. to celebrate this history and Ayodele’s considerable talent.” 

After seeing Casel’s Radcliffe presentation, A.R.T. Director of Artistic Programs Ryan McKittrick asked her to develop the project for their stage. Since then, it has come to include an ensemble cast of actors and dancers, directed by longtime Casel collaborator Torya Beard. 

And although Beard herself has a history as a dancer and choreographer, she wants to be clear that the show’s story about the lives of Casel and the other women tappers lies at the heart of the project.

“‘Diary’ is really rooted in personal narrative, and there is embodied storytelling. [But] when we’re talking about like an Ayodele Casel project, I don’t think it exists without music, and perhaps, at least right now, it doesn’t exist without tap dancing, but this is not a dance concert.” 

Find tickets and more information on “Diary of a Tap Dancer” online here


How the presidency was won, lost

Top campaign leaders from both sides talk about what worked, didn’t at Kennedy School postmortem


Nation & World

How the presidency was won, lost

Campaign managers on a panel at HKS.

Senior staff from the Harris and Trump campaigns (from left): Molly Ball, Chris LaCivita, Tony Fabrizio, Jen O’Malley Dillon, Julie Chavez Rodriguez, Quentin Fulks, Rob Flaherty, and Molly Murphy.

Photos by Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

7 min read

Top campaign leaders from both sides talk about what worked, didn’t at Kennedy School postmortem

Both campaigns agreed the presidential election was unprecedented with only an extremely narrow slice of the electorate up for grabs and the Democrats having to retool strategy and organization for a new candidate in the final stretch. And the thing that may have made the biggest difference was how and where you talked to undecided voters.

Senior staff from the Harris and Trump campaigns gathered at Harvard Kennedy School Friday to explain their thinking at critical junctures during the 2024 election. The postmortem, organized by the Institute of Politics, has been held after every presidential election since 1972.

Jen O’Malley Dillon, who had managed President Joe Biden’s 2020 and 2024 campaigns before taking the helm of Vice President Kamala Harris’ campaign after Biden dropped out in July, acknowledged the considerable difficulty they faced trying to shift a political operation built for one candidate to another with a little more than three months left in the race.

“But when the call came and the president said he was getting out, we really did flip the whole thing without knowing exactly how to do it,” she said. “And then the vice president was so strong out of the gate that I think it made momentum a little bit easier for us to pick up on and gave us a little bit of space to figure out the stuff we hadn’t worked out yet.”

“When the call came and the president said he was getting out, we really did flip the whole thing without knowing exactly how to do it.”

Jen O’Malley Dillon, Biden campaign manager
Jen O’Malley Dillon (left) and Julie Chavez Rodriguez.
Jen O’Malley Dillon (left) and Julie Chavez Rodriguez.

The Harris team said they knew from the start that they would be facing significant headwinds because the economy was emerging as a top issue, and voters felt the Biden-Harris administration had not done enough to address the inflation rate.

Beyond that, the Harris campaign leaders walked through other challenges they faced.

They pushed back on the accusations by pundits that they took certain demographic groups, like Black and Latino men, and younger voters, for granted, assuming that Harris’ race and gender would override economic or national security concerns.

“We weren’t running this campaign as an identity politics campaign,” said Quentin Fulks, principal deputy campaign manager for Harris. “We came out of the gate talking to everyone. If you think the economy sucks, it doesn’t get better if there’s a Black candidate.”

At the same time, Fulks said, “It didn’t help that the Trump campaign was obviously targeting these voters and making them feel … whether it be through [an anti-] trans ad, ‘She’s for they/them and Trump is for you,’ they were making her seem as if she was out of touch and out of line with their issues.”

Where the Harris team saw the biggest shift in support was among third-party voters, particularly those who had been dissatisfied with both Biden and Trump. Once Harris got in the race, however, “those voters snapped back very quickly” to the Democratic side, said Harris pollster Molly Murphy. Surprisingly, older voters, a group that Biden had always done well with, ended up being much more supportive of Harris than the campaign expected.

Responding to a common complaint from progressives that Harris’ elevation to the top of the ticket without a primary process was undemocratic, Fulks noted there were just 107 days left after Biden dropped out in which to identify a new candidate, unify the party, and launch an entirely new campaign before Election Day.

To hold an open primary and bypass Harris, Biden’s preferred choice, would have risked alienating Black women, a key Democratic Party voting bloc, and meant fielding a lesser-known candidate with no infrastructure, he said.

“I hear your concern, and I’m not saying that … open primaries are not important, but I also think [the campaign was] such an anomaly [that] it would have almost been virtually impossible to have an open primary of any success that would have put the Democratic Party in a position to be able to defeat Donald Trump,” he said.

Trump did unconventional things like attend mixed martial arts fights to show those voters he understood them and was reaching out.

Chris LaCivita , Trump campaign co-manager
Chris LaCivita (left) and Tony Fabrizio
Chris LaCivita (left) and Tony Fabrizio.

The Trump team said that early on one of their biggest challenges involved negative impressions of Project 2025, a collection of conservative policy proposals pushed by the Heritage Foundation and other conservative groups.

Voter concern started to gain traction while Biden was still in the race, especially on TikTok, and it caught the Trump team by surprise. That worry grew to alarm after seeing persuadable voters start to move in response to reports about it and Trump blowing up in anger over news stories tying the document directly back to him, they said.

“Obviously, we recognized that it was an issue, and we needed to kill it quickly,” said Chris LaCivita, co-manager of the Trump campaign.

In fact, Project 2025 was one issue where Democrats had a leg up on the Trump team, but by the time the Harris campaign began to focus on it, noted Tony Fabrizio, a veteran Republican pollster, the race had evolved, and that earlier stickiness and momentum was very hard for Harris to reclaim.

Both sides agreed that communication strategies may have made the biggest difference in 2024. The Republicans proved more effective at crafting and amplifying messages that resonated with 2024’s undecided voters. With so few up for grabs this election, finding and persuading those folks was critical.

Seeing that these voters were part of a larger, growing cohort of Americans who had unplugged from network and cable television, the Trump campaign invested heavily in targeting “streamers” (those who exclusively used streaming services), fans of internet-only programs, and listeners of entertainment podcasts, Fabrizio said.

And it’s why candidate Trump did unconventional things like attend mixed martial arts fights to show those voters he understood them and was reaching out, LaCivita added.

The media asymmetry turned out to be a decisive advantage for Republicans this year, but maybe not for much longer, Fabrizio said.

“Republicans were always more distrustful of what we’ll call the mainstream media than Democrats or independents. And so, what happened is, when the technology became available for alternative sources of information, Republicans were the first ones to flock to it because they weren’t happy. It’s the reason why Fox [News]exploded, it’s the reason why so many online sites are right-of-center sites,” he said. 

There are signs the left is also becoming disillusioned with mainstream media after controversies over endorsements at The Washington Post and The LA Times led to the cancellation of more than 250,000 subscriptions, and plummeting ratings at CNN and MSNBC post-election. Younger voters now turn increasingly to TikTok and other online platforms for news, an arena in which the Trump campaign conceded that the Harris team outplayed them. Most importantly, a recent Gallup poll shows only 31 percent of Americans still trust the media.

“That means there’s a chunk of Democrats that don’t trust the media anymore,” Fabrizio said. “As that distrust grows across the partisan spectrum, you’re going to see a greater proliferation of news sources and information sources, both on the right and the left. It’s just going to take a little bit more time for the left to get to where the right has been for several years about the news media.”


Reckoning with past, striving for better future

Street at Arnold Arboretum renamed Flora Way to honor enslaved woman


Campus & Community

Reckoning with past, striving for better future

A photo of the street sign the reads “Flora Way.”

Flora Way at the Arnold Arboretum.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

5 min read

Street at Arnold Arboretum renamed Flora Way to honor enslaved woman   

The roads, walkways, and collections throughout Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum bear the names of influential local philanthropists, landowners, and politicians. A new name, Flora, now joins the ranks of those being honored for their roles in shaping the history of the region.

In October, the city of Boston approved changing Bussey Street, named after merchant Benjamin Bussey, to Flora Way in honor of an enslaved woman who lived on an area estate in the 18th century.

Bussey, a sugar, coffee, and cotton merchant in the late 1700s and early 1800s, built much of his wealth through the trans-Atlantic trade of products produced by enslaved workers. He eventually retired from that business and turned his attention to farming.

“He accumulated all these small farm holdings and put it together into what is the Jamaica Plain side of the Arnold Arboretum,” Ned Friedman, director of the Arboretum, said. Friedman is the Faculty Fellow of the Arnold Arboretum and Arnold Professor of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology.

In 1842 Bussey donated to Harvard College his estate, which was combined in 1868 with land donated by New Bedford whaling merchant James Arnold for the creation of the Arboretum.

Bussey is one of several philanthropists identified in the University’s 2022 Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery report as a beneficiary of enslavement. Friedman said the Arboretum has been actively considering how best to acknowledge its past while looking to the future.

“We have a Bussey Hill; we have a Bussey Brook Meadow. We want to honor Benjamin Bussey for his philanthropy, because I feel personally that writing him completely out of history removes the historical context,” said Friedman of Bussey’s complex legacy.

The idea to remove his name from the street, he said, didn’t originate with the Arboretum. Last spring, a group of neighbors across Jamaica Plain and Roslindale came together to suggest the change. They came up with five alternatives to Bussey. The list included Flora and two other enslaved people, Dick Welsh and Cuffe, along with transcendentalist Margaret Fuller, who wrote fondly of the hemlocks and pines on the site, and botanist Shiu-Ying Hu, Ph.D. 1949, a highly respected emeritus senior research fellow at the Arboretum.

“I would have been happy with any of the five names that they suggested,” Friedman said. “I just stepped back and let the community do their business.”

Ultimately, organizers reached a consensus to select Flora — a woman enslaved by William Dudley, the son of Gov. Joseph Dudley.

The Dudley estate was located in current-day Roslindale on Weld Street and included a small commercial farm. Flora was one of four people enslaved on the property, and the only woman.

“Renaming this street to Flora Way makes a powerful statement that Flora mattered.”

Sara Bleich.
Sara Bleich, Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative

Not much is known about Flora, other than records that detail her purchase price of 40 pounds and the fact that Dudley bought shoes and an apron for her. The only other record of Flora is a probate file showing her sale by Dudley’s estate, again for 40 pounds.

“Flora was connected to what is now the Arnold Arboretum, a place that holds a commitment to public health and accessibility and is intentional about creating equitable access to urban green space,” said Sara Bleich, the University’s inaugural vice provost for special projects in charge of the Harvard & the Legacy of Slavery Initiative at a renaming ceremony at the end of October.

The name change signifies not only Harvard’s acknowledgment of the past, but also a promise to strive for a better future.

“Flora Way is just part of a bigger set of conversations we’re having here about justice, about equity,” Friedman said.

The Arboretum, which is free and open to the public and receives millions of visitors each year, is surrounded by several “environmental justice” communities, where 40 percent or more of the residents are people of color and median incomes fall below city averages.

City-run entrances to the park from those neighborhoods have fallen into disrepair, with gates welded shut and stone walls covered in graffiti. Friedman, and Harvard, have been advocating for their renovation, and in some cases, pledging to support efforts financially.

“Access is really important,” Friedman said. “Because that’s part of what I think matters a great deal about whether people feel welcome.”

Of the nine entrances to the park, five are slated for renovation, including Poplar Gate at the intersection of the new Flora Way and South Street, which is set to be completed within the next month or two.

“Renaming this street to Flora Way makes a powerful statement that Flora mattered,” Bleich said. “Reckoning with past history gives us a fuller view of what came before us, the injustices done that society needs to be held accountable for, and how this should shape our future for the better,” she added.

Since the release of the Legacy of Slavery report, efforts continue across the University to implement recommendations and continue digging into the past. To learn more, a historical tour of 10 stops around Cambridge that explore the University’s connections to slavery is available, and the full report is online.

The Arnold Arboretum is open every day from sunrise to sunset.


How a ‘guest’ in English language channels ‘outsider’ perspective into fiction

Laila Lalami talks about multilingualism, inspirations of everyday life, and why she starts a story in the middle


Laila Lalami (pictured) speaking with James Wood.

James Wood (left) and Laila Lalami.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

Arts & Culture

How a ‘guest’ in English language channels ‘outsider’ perspective into fiction

Laila Lalami talks about multilingualism, inspirations of everyday life, and why she starts a story in the middle

5 min read

Laila Lalami reached for her phone early one morning and found a baffling notification. If she were to leave her house right then, it said, she could make it to YogaWorks by 7:30 a.m.

The award-winning novelist did not immediately leave for yoga class. Instead, she spent the day pondering technology and its access to people’s unexpressed thoughts and unrealized actions. The experience, now more than 10 years in the past, left her with the idea for her forthcoming novel.

“I turned to my husband, and I said, ‘Pretty soon, the only privacy we’re going to have is in our dreams,’” Lalami recalled at a recent Writers Speak event hosted by the Mahindra Humanities Center. “Then I thought, ‘What if someday even that boundary starts to become porous? What might happen?’”

Lalami, author of “The Moor’s Account” (2014) and “The Other Americans” (2019), read an excerpt from “The Dream Hotel,” available in March. Moderator James Wood, professor of the practice of literary criticism, also asked her about multilingualism, narrative structure, and finding inspiration in everyday life.

Even after publishing four novels, Lalami — the 2023-2024 Catherine A. and Mary C. Gellert Fellow at Harvard Radcliffe Institute — said she still describes herself as a “guest” in the English language.

The trilingual author grew up speaking both Arabic and French in post-colonial Morocco. Enrolled at a French primary school, her introduction to the written word came via French children’s classics like “Tintin” and “Asterix.” As an English major at Université Mohammed-V in Rabat, Lalami began to resent how early French education had prevented her from developing that initial literary connection to Arabic. 

“I developed a dislike of writing in French,” Lalami said. “I felt that the more I did it, the more I felt awkward doing it. It felt to me there was a bizarre sort of colonial gaze that I could not detach from the writing.”

Now working in English, Lalami still feels a sense of estrangement from the language. But she’s able to channel it into her creative process. As a writer, she sometimes imagines her dialogue is taking place in Arabic and she is translating it to English. This was particularly the case with her second novel, “Secret Son” (2009).

“If the story is successful, we forget to question things like what language they are speaking,” Lalami said.

As for narrative structure, Lalami spoke to the tendency of starting her books in the middle of a story, including multiple character perspectives and adding elaborate backstories. 

She stumbled upon the approach “organically” with her first novel, “Hope and Other Dangerous Pursuits” (2005), which opens with the capsizing of an inflatable boat carrying four Moroccans across the Strait of Gibraltar. From there, the narrative shifts between each of the characters, detailing their lives before and after the crossing. 

“I started writing the story of this character as he’s going through this journey, and the story kept getting longer because I was doing these flashbacks about his life before he got onto that boat,” Lalami explained. “I thought, ‘Well, what happens to this other person that’s sitting next to him?’ So I decided to write a story about them.”

Similarly, “The Other Americans,” her fourth novel and a National Book Award finalist, begins with a car crash and unfolds through nine different first-person accounts. Wood, who is also a staff writer and book critic at The New Yorker, noted the rich details that bring the book’s immigrant characters to life — from the main character, a Moroccan man who names his California business “Aladdin’s Donuts,” to his wife’s confusion over an English sign that reads: “Don’t even think about parking here.” 

“If we think of the fiction of immigration, it’s so centrally about varieties of estrangement, right?” Wood said. “It’s about trying to see things with new eyes.”

Lalami said she loves building characters’ backstories right down to the smallest detail. “As somebody who constantly feels as an outsider, I’ve come to realize that it’s very much the outsider-ness that makes me a writer,” she said. “That feeling of being on the outside looking in.”

The outsider perspective is what prompted Lalami to write “The Moor’s Account,” which won the American Book Award and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. The novel is the fictionalized memoir of Estevanico, an enslaved Moroccan on the ill-fated 1528 Narváez expedition to Florida. His name appears only in passing in historical records, inspiring Lalami to reconstruct his backstory before and after the expedition. 

During the Q&A session, a student asked Lalami about the steps on her journey to becoming a writer, which included a linguistics Ph.D. program and a stint at a majority-male tech company. 

Lalami responded with the same advice she gives to students in MFA programs: Every life experience can become material for fiction. Case in point? Her forthcoming novel features a female main character working at a large tech company.

“That is what helps you become a writer, is that feeling that you’re kind of weird and different from everybody,” Lalami said. “Don’t ever try to be like everybody else. Embrace that weirdness, because that’s what fiction comes out of.”


Garber installed as Harvard’s 31st president

Friends and family, colleagues honor leader who ‘radiates trustworthiness’


Campus & Community

Garber installed as Harvard’s 31st president

President Garber at the  podium during his installation.

President Alan Garber.

Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

5 min read

Friends and family, colleagues honor leader who ‘radiates trustworthiness’

Alan Garber was installed as Harvard’s 31st president in a celebration attended by colleagues, University leaders, and family and friends Saturday at the Harvard Art Museums.

Provost for almost 13 years, Garber was named president in August, after serving as interim leader since January, and has navigated the University through a period of extraordinary challenges and intense scrutiny. Penny Pritzker, senior fellow of the Harvard Corporation, pointed to Garber’s character and experience in praising him for meeting the moment.

The University’s new president “is a person of deep learning, strong values, bedrock integrity, and a fierce commitment to academic excellence,” she said.

Garber, an economist, physician, and health policy scholar, opened his remarks by thanking those in attendance, including his wife and children, for preparing him for his new role. Among those gathered for the ceremony were past Harvard presidents Larry Summers, Drew Faust, Larry Bacow, and Claudine Gay.

“Nothing fortifies quite like a room full of colleagues and dear friends, including my partners in the work and my predecessors in the Holyoke chair,” he said. “This is, in some ways, an inverted lecture. Each of you has taught me important lessons that have guided me to this point.”

He went on to note that the University is facing uncertain times that will require both robust collaboration and an unwavering commitment to integrity and excellence, including in its pursuit of the research and teaching that define its mission. Success will depend in part on embracing risk, he said.

“An excessive aversion to risk is a risk in and of itself. We must keep in mind, always, that the mistakes we have made — individually and collectively — may have been plentiful, but we have our long history to celebrate because they have not been fatal. Assuming that this trend continues, our history demands that we plan — boldly — for a very long future. We need to think not only in years and decades, but also in centuries.”

He added: “We forfeit opportunities when we feel as though the University cannot make a move without considering every possible ramification, without fully understanding every possible consequence. In a world that confronts us with challenges and opportunities more frequently than ever before, we will need to move forward with greater alacrity — and to correct course more quickly — than has been our custom.”

Faust, who as president named Garber provost in 2011, recruiting him from Stanford University, described a colleague whose hunger for knowledge is deep and inspiring.

“Alan is interested in everything, curious about everything … he is an intellectual and a practitioner, a thinker and a doer,” she said, nodding to Garber’s experience in medicine, economics, and policy, as well as his love for the arts and humanities. “At a time when trust in institutions generally, and in higher education in particular, has eroded so markedly, Alan radiates trustworthiness.”

William F. Lee, who preceded Pritzker as senior fellow of the Corporation, praised Garber as a leader of “unflappability and humility” who has demonstrated a “fundamental and unwavering determination to advance the best interests of the institution and the broader Harvard community.”

Vivian Y. Hunt, president of the Board of Overseers, said that Garber’s long record of contributions to the University reflects his strengths as a person and a leader.

“Since being formally elected to this presidency this summer, you continued to carry the mantle of leadership with humility, heart, spirit, humor, resilience, and resolve,” Hunt said.

The ceremony included the presentation by Garber’s predecessors of several insignia of the office. Dating to the 17th century, the insignia are traditionally given to each new Harvard president. Faust said that the tradition was not just an opportunity for Garber to pledge his leadership to the community, but also for the community to pledge its support to him.

“It’s a ritual that encompasses all of us, not just the man of honor,” said Faust, the Arthur Kingsley Porter University Professor. “We affirm our support for Alan as he embarks on his presidency, and as he navigates through change and through storm. And we pledge our commitment to doing all we can to ensure that Harvard thrives and the pursuit of veritas prevails in the decades and the centuries to come.”

The impact of that commitment extends far beyond campus, Garber noted, citing the promise of young scientists, pioneering research by recent Nobel laureates, and the service of Harvard veterans.

“The work done at Harvard — the good it does in the world — the good it will do in the world — is wonderfully abundant,” he said.

The ceremony concluded with a benediction by Rabbi William G. Hamilton of Congregation Kehillath Israel and the singing of “Fair Harvard” by Carolyn Y. Hao ’26.


Potter gets fired up about helping students find their own gifts

Roberto Lugo says his art creates conversations and ‘that’s where the magic happens’


Roberto Lugo.

Roberto Lugo during a workshop at the Harvard Ceramic Center.

Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Arts & Culture

Potter gets fired up about helping students find their own gifts

5 min read

Roberto Lugo says his art creates conversations and ‘that’s where the magic happens’

Ceramicist Roberto Lugo shared his work and his best advice with students who dropped by his residency at the Office for the Arts in mid-November.

“I really want to demystify that idea that art is only for people who have those gifts or people who have historically had access to it,” Lugo said in an interview. “For me, art is for everyone. One of the most satisfying parts about art is seeing someone figure out something that they offer that they didn’t think they did.”

The Puerto Rican artist, activist, and educator, whose pots can be found in a growing number of museum collections, worked with more than a dozen undergraduates — most of them women of color — over two days of campus workshops. Each visitor was offered a chance to work on cups or tiles, with Lugo providing generous coaching on everything from perfecting patterns to painting over gray clay. He even opened up about his Philadelphia upbringing and the inspiration he draws from hip-hop.

Aarna Pal-Yadav ’27
Aarna Pal-Yadav ’27 during the tile making session.
Underglaze materials line the table for a tile making session at the Harvard Ceramic Center.
Underglaze materials line the table.
An overhead camera projection shows Roberto Lugo’s tile techniqu
An overhead camera projection shows Lugo’s tile technique.

“During each workshop with undergraduates, Roberto inspired students to think about their lives and cultural backgrounds as a starting point and an indicator of what makes them unique,” observed Kathy King, director of the Ceramics Program and Visual Arts Initiatives at the OFA. “He then asked them to think about the words that came to mind, creating a visual vocabulary to decorate both cups and tiles with florals, text, and colorful patterns, among other things.”

Institutions including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art  have acquired Lugo’s work in recent years. Tiffany Onyeiwu ’25, who has a concentration in film and visual studies, is a frequent visitor to these spaces and was excited to meet the artist behind some of her favorite pieces.

“It’s been really inspiring to see an artist who has such a significant part of themselves embedded in their work,” said Onyeiwu, who attended both of the workshops Lugo offered. “Contemporary ceramics is becoming more prevalent in American culture, which is something that I’m excited and grateful for.”

Lugo also engaged with the community during a packed public lecture Monday evening at Harvard’s Ed Portal in Allston.

The event opened with performances by Salome Agbaroji ’27 and Elyse Martin-Smith ’25, social studies concentrators who delivered rhymes loaded with clever pottery references. Martin-Smith commemorated the 19th-century work of David Drake, a Black potter who produced a body of vessels while enslaved in South Carolina. Agbaroji, the 2023 National Youth Poet Laureate, captured attention with witty lyrics that cautioned listeners to “just stay out of the kiln” if they can’t “take the heat.”

“I was trying to write something that was very accessible and engaging to honor what pottery is and also honor the hip-hop culture that is so heavily infused in Roberto Lugo’s work,” said Agbaroji.

Roberto Lugo (left) talking to Tiffany Onyeiwu ’25,
Lugo with Tiffany Onyeiwu ’25.

Lugo’s presentation covered some of his most popular artwork as well as the people, music, and life events that affected his creative process. While most of Lugo’s art takes inspiration from European and Asian ceramic practices, he is also deeply influenced by Mexican and Peruvian ceramics as well as the textile traditions of Indigenous communities of the Americas.

“One of the specific things that is a challenge for me is that a lot of those communities are still struggling for representation of their own culture,” he said. “Even though I’m inspired by it and some of my work is influenced by it, I quite often stick to formats that are in many ways tropes or familiar visual elements from ceramics history. I try to be very thoughtful with where I borrow from, because I don’t want to replace a culture.”

Another of Lugo’s trademarks is pottery that incorporates portraits, from historical figures such as Frederick Douglass and Martin Luther King Jr. to influential musicians like Biggie Smalls and Erykah Badu. Lugo linked his penchant for portraiture to growing up amid Philadelphia’s great mural scene, with walls featuring people of color.

“Since I didn’t have any art history in school, that was really my perception of what art was,” Lugo said.

More recent works mix traditional methods with broader representative narratives. His “Orange and Black” series, for example, plays on ancient Greek glazed terracotta with modern depictions of city life.

Back at the Ceramics Program studio, Lugo shared a testament of the connective powers of artwork. “As an artist, there’s many different ways to engage with people outside of your own body,” he said. “One of them is through the physical artwork itself. There’s the display of the artwork and how it interacts and engages with people. There’s the educational facet to it, which is giving people the autonomy to make their own artwork. And then there’s the conversations that get created through both education and art-making. For me, that’s where the magic happens.”


Corporation strengthens engagement to inform support of research and teaching, presidential search in 2026

Pritzker expresses optimism on efforts to bring community together


Campus & Community

Corporation deepens engagement to advance key priorities

Penny Pritzker.

Penny Pritzker.

File photo by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

long read

Pritzker expresses optimism on efforts to bring community together

Penny Pritzker ’81, senior fellow of the Harvard Corporation, reflected on a year of transition and challenge for the campus community and outlined her plans for the year ahead in a recent conversation with the Gazette. Pritzker touched on engagement efforts underway at the Corporation, including a new approach to inform the next presidential search, and shared her perspective on ongoing work across the University to advance constructive dialogue and bring the community together.

A leader in business and philanthropy and former U.S. secretary of commerce, Pritzker joined the Harvard Corporation in 2018 and was elected senior fellow in 2022. She also served on Harvard’s Board of Overseers from 2002 to 2008.

This interview has been edited for clarity and length.


We’re coming toward the end of the semester and the end of a difficult year for Harvard and for higher education. How do you reflect on where we are now and how you and the Corporation are thinking about the year ahead?

Let’s not sugarcoat it — it’s been a painful and challenging year for Harvard, and I believe it’s important to acknowledge that even as we’ve begun to build for the future. We’ve faced relentless scrutiny about every aspect of the University, from stakeholders inside and outside the institution. We’re dealing with deep divisions that have emerged in our community due to the war in the Middle East. We are addressing longstanding challenges related to constructive dialogue on our campus and beyond, and we are cognizant of the need to ensure that a wide range of opinions and perspectives can be heard on campus. All of us on the Corporation are grateful to President [Alan] Garber and his team for charting a path through these difficult challenges. I feel optimistic that we are making progress, at the same time as all parts of the University are driving forward remarkable progress and excellence in our teaching and research mission.

Reflecting on the year, what are the lessons that the Corporation is taking on board and how are you planning to respond to those?

There are many lessons. We’ve certainly sought to listen and learn from the community. We have heard the community’s desire for greater transparency. We’ve heard concerns that the Corporation hasn’t engaged with the community sufficiently — and that feedback has informed our approach. We have made an intentional commitment to strengthen engagement and communication. My fellow Corporation members and I have participated in faculty town halls, regular dinners, and small group meetings with faculty members, meetings with the various task forces, and robust engagement with alumni on campus, locally and through virtual events around the country. In the last few weeks I met with the co-chairs of the Presidential Task Forces on Combating Antisemitism and Anti-Israeli Bias and on Combating Anti-Muslim, Anti-Arab, and Anti-Palestinian Bias, and I have been on campus often to meet with faculty, students, administrators, including at events around the Harvard-Yale game.

It is important to ensure we have the pulse of the community and that we are listening intently to the stakeholders in our community so that we understand how to best support Alan and his leadership team in advancing the priorities of the University. We understand that for the well-being of all our students, our community, and our mission, we need to be more open. So, our engagement will continue particularly as we approach discussions around advancing key academic or other priorities, as well as, importantly, the next presidential search. We know in such a dynamic institution that neither the Corporation nor the administration has all the answers. That is why listening, engaging, and taking advice are so critical.

“I feel optimistic that we are making progress, at the same time as all parts of the University are driving forward remarkable progress and excellence in our teaching and research mission.”

On the presidential search, you recently announced a new committee to look at the process moving forward. How is the Corporation thinking differently about the next search?

The new Presidential Search Process Committee will provide advice to the Corporation about best practices for the search for the 32nd president of Harvard, which will begin in late spring of 2026. The work this committee is undertaking, including engagement across our community and externally, will inform how we ultimately undertake that search. Everything from who should be on the search committee, to how faculty and the broader community are engaged. What kind of external support do we need to undertake the search? The mandate for this committee is broad and our interest in advice is sincere.

I will say that our last search was both robust and wide-ranging. We consulted extensively and considered a wide range of candidates before selecting Claudine Gay, who was unanimously selected as the right choice at that time. But we recognize circumstances have changed and we need to think about the search with that in mind and how we best proceed from where we are. We approach this with a lot of humility and a determination to get the right leadership for an institution we all care about so deeply.

Can you say more about the new committee?

In the months ahead, this committee will engage our community to hear thoughts and considerations on how we undertake the next presidential search. They will also continue to gather information on how other institutions conduct these types of searches and look broadly for best practices. The membership is made up of three members of the Corporation — Biddy Martin, Ken Frazier, and Diana Nelson — and three members who will bring perspectives from outside the Corporation: Sylvia Burwell, who is on the Board of Overseers and was president of American University; Patti Saris, who is a former president of the Overseers and federal judge; and Brad Bloom, who has been a successful business leader. All three are alums who have contributed a wide range of other service to the Harvard community.

Alan Garber has been widely praised for his leadership during a tough period. How would you reflect on his presidency so far?

I believe Alan Garber is doing an outstanding job. He has been thoughtful and intentional in advancing our mission and priorities, as well as leading in ways to heal and strengthen our community during a very challenging period. This isn’t just my view, as I also hear this from faculty, alumni, and other leaders. He has helped the community come together, set in motion important initiatives to tackle hate and to encourage and foster open inquiry and constructive dialogue, and all the while helped move forward our incredibly important teaching and research mission.

What would you say has been the hallmark of his leadership to this point?

What we hear from people within Harvard and from many outside is that Alan engages with authenticity and without defensiveness. He is willing to acknowledge that Harvard is not perfect and that of course we have more work to do. I believe Alan is well-positioned to bring the community along with him as we address these challenges.

A great example of this is the work he set in motion on constructive dialogue and open inquiry. In this area, Alan has encouraged deans and faculty to create opportunities for debate and discussion across difference. He and Provost [John] Manning deserve huge credit for that and for leading the work on institutional voice and open inquiry. The report of the working group led by Tomiko Brown-Nagin and Eric Beerbohm brought into sharp focus the problem of students and faculty self-censoring and the implications of that for an academic community.

At the same time, Alan and the entire Corporation are deeply dedicated to ensuring that we center academic excellence in Harvard’s teaching, learning, and research mission. As chief academic officer when he was provost and now as president, Alan firmly believes in the work that happens in classrooms and labs as the core of our mission. So, you see, we can strengthen our community, bridge the divides that exist, and model the very forms of constructive dialogue that are vital to a place like Harvard, while simultaneously celebrating and advancing the teaching, learning, and scholarship that are core to our mission.

“It is important to ensure we have the pulse of the community and that we are listening intently to the stakeholders in our community so that we understand how to best support Alan and his leadership team in advancing the priorities of the University.”

How should the University be considering engaging with the new political landscape in Washington?

While we don’t know precisely what proposals that affect higher education will look like, we believe that engaging with leaders in Washington is critical. Harvard and institutions of higher education across the country must continue to make a strong case for the effective and strong partnership between higher education and the federal government. We cannot take it for granted. This is a partnership that has offered considerable return for the American people in the form of medical discoveries and treatments, insights and innovations that provide personal opportunity for so many in our country, and research and extraordinary innovations that power the U.S. economy as well as improve U.S. competitiveness in critical industries and across the globe.

Fundamentally, in this time of great change I believe that higher education can do more to expand opportunity for many, whether that’s economically or from a well-being standpoint.

Alan has been in Washington on six occasions in the last year, and I know he is planning to continue his advocacy for this partnership in research funding, financial aid, and other areas. This is work that has my support as well as that of all the other fellows.

It’s been widely discussed that the portrayal of Harvard from some outside the University bears little resemblance to the day-to-day experience of those living, working, studying, and researching within the community. Do you feel that some things get lost in the noisy swirl around higher education right now?

Yes, it is frankly striking to be on campus and to speak with hundreds of students, faculty, and others over the course of the last year. The focus here remains — as it has always been — on the pursuit of excellence on every front. Supporting that campus environment is something the fellows take incredibly seriously, and several times throughout this semester — so far — we’ve been reminded of what is possible here at Harvard.

This includes the eight Harvard College students selected as Rhodes Scholars in recent weeks. Harvard Medical School Professor Gary Ruvkun was named a Nobel laureate. Earlier this semester, we had the announcement of a new AI-driven cancer diagnostics tool developed by HMS researchers. Just last month, we saw the launch of the Lavine Learning Lab at the A.R.T., with support from Jonathan and Jeannie Lavine, which will strengthen engagement between public high schools and the A.R.T.’s groundbreaking theatrical programming.

These are all exciting developments and recognitions. They are also powerful examples of how our community provides the opportunity for our students and faculty to pursue excellence, and along the way impact lives well beyond the boundaries of our campus.

Advancing excellence is where President Garber is focused and the Corporation is fully supportive. Together, we are listening and learning. The University is on the right track and making progress under Alan’s leadership. Of course, we will face hurdles and challenges. But let’s step back. Harvard is a special place and a special community. All of us are committed to the mission of excellence in teaching, learning, and research, as well as to the goal of ensuring the well-being of all members of our community — students, faculty, staff, and more.


Why I changed my mind

Harvard students describe a time they saw the world in a new light


Campus & Community

Why I changed my mind

Harvard students describe a time they saw the world in a new light

8 min read
the thinker statue

‘I never once thought that I didn’t want to believe in something’

Dara Omoloja ’26

Dara Omoloja

Dara Omoloja

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

I’ve had a lot of conversations with my peers at dinner and in class about religion. I grew up very Christian, but when I came to Harvard, I started questioning a lot of the beliefs I grew up with: Maybe what I believed to be true wasn’t exactly what I thought it was. 

When I look at Christianity now, as much as I see a message of love, I also see a lot of issues with the way that it’s practiced. I wanted to become more open, learning more about my friends’ religions and also getting involved with multiple different populations. There are so many people with so many different mindsets and beliefs here and so I felt like it was the best place to explore. 

At one point, I was bordering on being agnostic or spiritual, but one thing that stuck with me is the fact that I never once thought that I didn’t want to believe in something. Even after I spoke to so many people, I find importance in religion, not just because it’s something you should follow, but because it’s just nice to have faith in something even if it might not be real. I think it’s an important comfort for some people that they might not be able to find it anywhere else. 


After this class, I washed my hands of germophobia

Ricardo Fernandes Garcia ’27

Ricardo Fernandes Garcia.

Ricardo Fernandes Garcia.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

I took a class called “Microbial Symbioses,” and I’m not a STEM person but that class really expanded my mind. We saw the different ways we interact with bacteria or microorganisms, and the way society tends to see microbes as enemies. We tend to be germophobic and sanitized. We tend to see them as related to plague and illness. But this class showed that we live because of microbes. Everything that is living interacts with microbiology. Even in coral reefs, the microbes allow the coral to survive. 

One of the chapters we read talked about how hospitals usually keep their windows shut. But because of the way microbes flow in the air, it is better to have open windows in hospitals. There have been studies that show having open windows in hospitals allows patients to recover faster. We tend to see health as correlated with sanitation. We don’t want to get infected. But this class was reframing it as having people infected with the correct microbes, microbes that are beneficial, as opposed to not being infected. It’s an interesting way of reshaping medicine. 


A dining hall chat led me on a listening and tasting tour of 4 countries

Joseph Foo ’26

Joseph Foo.

Joseph Foo.

Photo by Jodi Hilton

Last summer I was going to do research on noodles. It was the most bizarre and random topic I could think of. I was really confused when I was writing my proposal. There were so many theories, so many methodologies, so many different ways of doing it. There was so much information out there. HOLLIS was swarming me with texts. 

So I was going to Friday dinner at Pfoho, and I happened to meet a Dining Services worker whom I see every week. It just so happened that day they were serving a cuisine that was native to her. And she was talking to me about the food, where it came from, and how happy she was to see her own local traditions being represented. She gave me a whole backstory about her upbringing, her recipes, her life experiences. I was amazed by her passion and the joy she had in talking about food. And then that got me thinking: “What if I throw away all that theory for a second, and I just steep myself in good old ethnography? Forget the theory, forget all these big academic ideas. Listen to the stories, learn from them, collect them, make sense of them later.” That’s what I did. So for the past three months, I’ve been doing noodle research in Japan, Mongolia, Korea, and Greece. I went through a typhoon, I went to the mountains, got lost on a bus, I went through all sorts of different things. It was amazing, an absolute blast. And it all started with me getting answers to a question I didn’t know I had. 

You expect the best conversations to be in class, to be with your professors, to be with your teaching fellows, to be with your classmates. And that’s true, you know. They give you wonderful conversations. But sometimes, it’s the places you least expect that you get the most out of. To that end, I always say that conversation is about two things: It’s about trust, and it’s about humility. You need to be humble enough to learn from anyone and everyone you meet. Also, from that trust, from that bond between people that gets you talking not just from the mind but from the heart. Get them to share what really means something to them. That’s something that really changed my life this summer. 


I was an introvert until I had to live with 4 strangers

Juhee Kim ’28

Juhee Kim.

Juhee Kim.

Photo by Jodi Hilton

During the summer, when we first got our rooming assignments, I found I was going to be in a room with four different girls. This is a hallway situation, so there’s one shared bathroom. We had three singles and one double. All of us obviously wanted a single, including myself. And because I’m very introverted, I didn’t know how to say it to them. So I sucked it up. Me and this other girl were like, “You know what? Let’s stop fighting. We’ll be in the double together.” When I got here, I wasn’t in the best mood because of this entire situation. But I ended up loving all of them. I love the hallway situation. We actually opened our suite doors so that we would have one long suite together. And I’m so close with all of them. I don’t know where my introvertedness went to — it’s definitely still there — but I’m definitely so much more extroverted than I was in high school. I love my roommate, and I really like everybody in the hallway. I don’t know how I got here. I’m so extroverted now, and I’m so social. 

Even if you’re in a room of four girls you’ve never met in your entire life — one is international, we’re from everywhere all over the country — even if it’s completely random, there’s so many different ways to get along and connect with them, even if you’re so introverted like I was in high school. I’ve loved my experience at Harvard so far, and I’m sure I’ll enjoy it for my next four years. And I’m actually planning on blocking with them. I’m not really the type to say my thoughts very much. Even if I have opinions, I just keep it to myself so that there’s no conflicts. But my roommates are very straightforward. They will come to me and be like, “No. Speak your truths. Say your things. Don’t keep it to yourself.” That made me a lot more open with all of them, and that definitely improved our relationship.


‘When I was growing up, the idea of studying gender and race seemed like a waste of time’

Michelle Chang ’26 

Michelle Chang.

Michelle Chang.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Last year, I took a class, “Race, Gender, and Performance.” Growing up in a very traditional Asian household, the ideas of sexual orientation and gender are not really talked about. I started from knowing what a man is and what a woman is. I didn’t really understand the psychological aspects of gender. After this class, my perspective changed, in the sense that I’d thought that gender was really a biological factor, but I realized it’s something that changes between different individuals. Despite the fact there are psychological differences between people, there’s actually a very logical explanation for a lot of things. That’s what I learned through the different gender theories in the class. When I was growing up, the idea of studying gender and race seemed like a waste of time, especially because my parents valued hard technical classes like STEM, math, physics, etc. Learning gender theory helped me understand individuals who don’t relate to heterosexual norms. 


Best advice I’ve gotten here: Put passion first, money will follow

Trevor Sardis ’28

Trevor Sardis.

Trevor Sardis.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Coming in, I was looking to do a major where I made the most money. I talked to a lacrosse teammate, and he told me I should focus on what I’m interested in. I should enjoy my time here as much as I can. The major doesn’t matter. You could go find a job where you’ll make money, and with a major that you’re interested in, you can find a job that you’re interested in as well. That was probably the best piece of advice I’ve gotten here. That made me change the way I look at how I’ll do school over the next few years.

As told to Danny Laughary ’25, Harvard Correspondent


Why do gliomas tend to recur in the brain?

First look at the interplay between neurons and tumors sheds light on formation, spread


Health

Why do gliomas tend to recur in the brain?

Researchers revealed which neurons in a mouse brain, shown in red, connect to a human glioma, shown in green.

Researchers revealed which neurons in a mouse brain, shown in red, connect to a human glioma, shown in green.

mage: Annie Hsieh

6 min read

First look at the interplay between neurons and tumors sheds light on formation, spread

Every week, Harvard Medical School neuro-oncologist Annie Hsieh treats patients with gliomas — the most common type of brain cancer, including the deadliest, glioblastoma.

After Hsieh’s neurosurgeon colleagues remove a glioma surgically, it often looks like none of the cancer is left behind, she says. Radiation and other treatments may follow. Yet gliomas tend to come back, not just at the original site but in distant parts of the brain, threatening neurological harm and, in some cases, death.

What happens in the brain to encourage these tumors to regrow there, while only rarely appearing in other parts of the body? The question has stumped scientists for decades and made gliomas one of the hardest-to-treat cancers. It’s also a mystery that physician-scientist Hsieh has long wanted to solve.

Now, she and HMS collaborators have filled in a piece of the puzzle by providing the first look at the types of neurons in the brain that connect to gliomas. 

The team’s findings were reported Wednesday in PNAS.

Profiling the identities and properties of such glioma-innervating neurons in mice provides new insights into what drives these cancers’ formation and spread in the brain. The findings can also help researchers devise new treatment strategies to stop these tumors from coming back. 

“This is a first step that provides a visual explanation for why the tumors can be everywhere in the brain,” said Hsieh, first author of the study and HMS instructor in neurology at Mass General Hospital. “We can now see where the connected neurons originate, study how they integrate with gliomas, and look for opportunities to interrupt growth.”

“It’s fascinating how the neural network functions and how these super-scary tumors integrate with and infiltrate the entire nervous system.”

Annie Hsieh, neuro-oncologist 

The study overcomes a long-standing obstacle to visualizing and analyzing the neurons that link with gliomas and demonstrates a way to advance the study of interactions between tumors and the nervous system more broadly.

Hsieh conducted the work when she was a research fellow in neurobiology in the lab of Bernardo Sabatini and in cell biology in the lab of Marcia Haigis in the Blavatnik Institute at HMS. Haigis and Sabatini are co-senior authors of the study.

How gliomas hack the network

Gliomas arise from glia, cells that perform essential functions in sculpting and maintaining neural circuits. Scientists already knew that neurons form synapses onto glioma cells, but they couldn’t see where the other ends of those neurons (the cell bodies) are in the brain. That obscured the neurons’ identities.

Hsieh and team successfully traced the glioma-innervating neurons back to their sources using a rabies virus engineered to infect only specific cells of interest and to light up those cells when it gets in. The virus travels from the tumor cell back through the neuron that connects to it.

The researchers injected human glioma cells into the brains of mice and waited for neurons to connect with the tumors. They then applied the rabies virus to light up cells of interest. Soon, they had a picture illuminating the mouse brains showing all the glowing neurons that led to the glioma.

The maps revealed that the gliomas hook into existing patterns of neuronal wiring.

“The wires are already there; the gliomas just connect to them,” Hsieh said. “They hijack what’s already in place rather than forming their own arbitrary connections.”

And those neurons originate from across the brain, the researchers observed.

“They come all the way from the interior part of brain to go to the tumor,” Hsieh said. “It’s fascinating how the neural network functions and how these super-scary tumors integrate with and infiltrate the entire nervous system.”

Unmasking neurons’ secret identities

The team found that most of the glioma-innervating neurons extending from the far reaches of the brain are the type that makes glutamate, a major brain chemical that excites neurons. This finding aligns with previous observations that neuronal excitation stimulates glioma growth, and that neuron-glioma communication involves glutamate.

Subsets of the far-reaching glioma-innervating neurons, though, showed signs that they make both glutamate and another chemical called GABA, which inhibits neuronal activity. In some brain areas, glioma-innervating neurons from near the tumor site appeared to be largely GABAergic.

The results suggest that neurons that interact with glioma cells are more diverse than currently appreciated. The implications of this for tumor growth and spread are not yet known.

“We see that the tumor is connected to everywhere. Whether these connections provide a path for them to go everywhere is something we need to study,” Hsieh said.

The team probed the electrical properties of the glioma-innervating neurons and found certain differences between them and similar neurons in brains without glioma. Such variations between normal and glioma-innervating neurons or between neuron-neuron and neuron-glioma interactions offer valuable clues to researchers like Hsieh, who seek ways to intervene in cancerous processes while preserving normal function.

The need to develop glioma treatments is urgent, Hsieh said. Researchers have tried to treat gliomas with drugs that work for other types of cancers, but most of them have failed, she noted. 

“By unraveling the drivers of glioma-neuron interactions and identifying unique mechanisms, we can explore strategies to interrupt them, potentially stopping the tumors in their tracks and preventing their return,” Hsieh said.

Although she knows it will be many years before discoveries made in the lab translate into therapies for her patients with glioma and others around the world, Hsieh remains optimistic that these latest insights can help move the field forward.

“It’s not close to the clinic yet,” she said, “but it’s one inch forward.”

Additional authors include Sanika Ganesh, Tomasz Kula, Madiha Irshad, Emily A. Ferenczi, Wengang Wang, Yi-Ching Chen, Song-Hua Hu, Zongyu Li, and Shakchhi Joshi.

This work was supported the National Institutes of Health (including National Cancer Institute award K12CA090354), Howard Hughes r Institute, Lubin Family Foundation Scholar Award, American Academy of Neurology, Burroughs Wellcome Fund, Ludwig Center at HMS, and Glenn Foundation for Medical Research. Confocal images were acquired at the Core for Imaging Technology & Education at HMS, and fluorescence in situ hybridization was performed by the Neurobiology Imaging Facility at HMS.

Haigis received research funding from Agilent Technologies and ReFuel Bio; serves on the scientific advisory boards of Alixia, Minovia Therapeutics, and MitoQ; is on the editorial boards of Cell Metabolism and Molecular Cell; and is a consultant and founder of ReFuel Bio.


Probe the gut, protect the brain?

In fight against Parkinson’s and other disorders, two-way connection may someday lead to a breakthrough


Health

Probe the gut, protect the brain?

Illustration of gut and brain as puzzle pieces.

Illustrations by Judy Blomquist/Harvard Staff

long read

In fight against Parkinson’s and other disorders, two-way connection may someday lead to a breakthrough

“For two or three years, I was having nausea for several hours every day,” said Keefe, a retired lawyer living in New Hampshire who suffers from Parkinson’s disease. “I’d wake up in the morning feeling sick and I couldn’t make any plans at all. Fortunately, I was retired, but I wasn’t planning on this for my retirement.”

Parkinson’s is a neurodegenerative disorder affecting cells that control movement. Patients and the doctors who treat them have long known that severe gastrointestinal issues — nausea, abdominal pain, diarrhea, constipation — are a feature of the condition, in some cases preceding neurological dysfunction by decades. But in recent years research around the disease has started to point to a connection that is more than incidental. The gut, experts say, may be where Parkinson’s starts.

“What if you were able to get your screening colonoscopy and be told there’s a sign that you’ll progress to Parkinson’s unless we intervene now. And wouldn’t it be wonderful if we had a way to intervene now?”

Trisha Pasricha, specialist in neurogastroenterology and director of clinical research at Beth Israel’s Institute for Gut-Brain Research
Trisha Pasricha in her lab.

Trisha Pasricha.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

“Everyone’s goal is to find an early biomarker for Parkinson’s and our hope is that we can find one in the gut,” said Trisha Pasricha, a specialist in neurogastroenterology and director of clinical research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center’s Institute for Gut-Brain Research. “What if you were able to get your screening colonoscopy and be told there’s a sign that you’ll progress to Parkinson’s unless we intervene now? And wouldn’t it be wonderful if we had a way to intervene now? There are many steps that need to happen, but that’s the goal.”

Central to Pasricha’s vision is the gut’s enteric nervous system, which contains as many neurons as the spinal cord and presides over digestive processes that function as the body’s intake department: proteins, carbohydrates, alcohol, drugs, fiber, agricultural pesticides, hormones given to livestock, chemicals used in food processing, bacteria, viruses, and on and on. The system processes signals about what we’ve consumed and how to respond: throw it back up or move it along; speed it up or slow it down.

Also key: a focus on the two-way nature of the gut-brain connection. Stress caused by the perception of potential danger can cause digestive ills, for example, while signals from the gut’s own nervous system, the enteric nervous system, can spur the brain into mobilizing the body via hunger, cravings, nausea, and pain.

“The enteric nervous system is this large network that runs throughout the gut,” Pasricha said. “It’s constantly signaling, influencing our mood, our wants, our needs. Some of the earliest animals had an enteric nervous system well before anyone developed a brain, well before anyone developed a central nervous system, because we all had to eat. It’s like the OG of our bodies.”

Illustration of brain and gut’s enteric nervous system interacting.

The gut-brain connection goes both ways. Stress caused by the perception of danger can cause digestive ills, for example, while signals from the gut’s enteric nervous system can spur the brain into mobilizing the body via hunger, nausea, and pain.

“Parkinson’s disease is very well known and that galvanizes a lot of research,” Pasricha said. “What we often find in science is that when we understand mechanisms behind one disease, it teaches us lessons that we can apply to the other diseases too.”

Theories of the case

There is some variation in Parkinson’s disease, which affects nearly 1 million Americans, but the most common form of the condition, sporadic Parkinson’s, is believed to stem from a complex interaction of environmental and genetic factors.

The disease develops over decades and is caused by a misfolded protein — alpha-synuclein — accumulating in dopaminergic neurons, which play a key role in regulating movement, cognition, and emotion. This process leads to the disease’s characteristic tremors, followed by slowed movements, altered gait, and impaired balance. The impact on neck and facial muscles slurs speech. Patients can experience difficulty swallowing, leading, in later stages, to the need for a feeding tube. The degeneration can spread to other types of neurons and, in some cases, contribute to dementia.

In 2016, researchers examined samples of gut tissue taken from Parkinson’s patients before they developed symptoms. They found alpha-synuclein present in the gut as early as two decades before it appeared in the brain. Additional studies have offered clues to how the protein might travel to the brain, showing that peptic ulcer patients who underwent vagotomies — severance of the main nerve connecting the gut and the brain — experienced significantly lower incidence of Parkinson’s disease.

These findings have led some scientists to embrace the idea that alpha-synuclein appears first in the gut in some forms of Parkinson’s. There, the protein — or changes associated with it — may create disturbances in the enteric nervous system, causing severe constipation, gastroparesis, and other hallmark Parkinson’s gut symptoms. It then moves up the vagus nerve to the central nervous system, where it begins the assault that leads to neurodegeneration.

Illustration of alpha-synuclein traveling from gut to central nervous system via vagus nerve.

Some researchers think alpha-synuclein, a protein associated with Parkinson’s, first appears in the gut and then travels the vagus nerve to the central nervous system, leading to neurodegeneration.

In September, Pasricha and colleagues added to that emerging picture, linking damage to the mucosa that lines the upper small intestine to Parkinson’s disease. The study, published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, found that among more than 9,000 patients with no signs of Parkinson’s when they were examined, those with mucosal damage experienced a dramatically increased risk — 76 percent — of later developing the disease.

Subhash Kulkarni, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School and co-author on the paper, cautioned that while the results are intriguing, much work remains. Scientists still don’t know for sure what alpha-synuclein does in the gut, he noted, and the protein has also been found in the skin and salivary glands.

“These are initial forays,” Kulkarni said. “The relevance of these proteins in the gut to Parkinson’s is still not well understood.”

Beyond Parkinson’s

Laura Cox arrived at Brigham and Women’s in 2019 for postdoctoral studies on the microbiome, focusing on multiple sclerosis, a neurodegenerative condition in which the immune system attacks the myelin insulation that sheathes nerve cells. She worked in the lab of Howard Weiner, the Robert L. Kroc Professor of Neurology, who kept a plaque on his desk that read “Cure as many diseases as possible.” She took that admonition to heart.

“We said, ‘If we’re going to do the microbiome and MS, we’re going to work with our neighbors across the hall,’” said Cox, today an assistant professor of neurology at Harvard Medical School and the Brigham’s Ann Romney Center for Neurologic Diseases. “A really important thing that’s emerging is that there is clear evidence that the gut microbiome can influence neurologic disease.”

In addition to MS, Cox’s lab works on Parkinson’s, Alzheimer’s, and ALS, trying to decipher how gut microbes influence diseases that a few decades ago were thought to be confined to the brain and central nervous system. What she and other experts have found is that “dysbiosis” — shifts in the microbiome favoring one species of bacteria over another — occurs in each condition. And some of the same names keep popping up: Bacteroidetes, Akkermansia, Blautia, and Prevotella, among others.

Illustration of harmful bacteria in petri dish.

These bacteria ingest and secrete metabolites that protect or harm health as they live, reproduce, and die, and can trigger neurodegeneration in two major ways, according to Cox. They can interfere with immune function that otherwise might remove harmful proteins such as the amyloid beta that accumulates in Alzheimer’s disease. They can also boost inflammation, an important contributor to the neurological damage in Parkinson’s disease.

“What we found in Alzheimer’s was that Bacteroidetes drove immunosenescence and it blocked this important repair process in which microglia go into the brain and clear out plaques,” Cox said. “In Parkinson’s there’s really strong evidence that the gut microbiota contribute to disease by driving inflammation.”

There are three routes through which gut metabolites affect the brain, according to Francisco Quintana, a professor of neurology at the Brigham whose lab studies the gut-brain axis and neurodegeneration. As in Parkinson’s, they can travel via the nervous system and the vagus nerve. They can also move directly to the brain via the bloodstream, crossing the blood-brain barrier. Third, they can activate immune cells in the gut that travel to the brain and release signaling molecules called cytokines. Those molecules can also cross the blood-brain barrier and trigger the brain’s own immune cells into action.

“I don’t know if it is cause or consequence, but if we model that gut flora, there might be effects on central nervous system pathology — and I think that’s extremely exciting,” Quintana said. “The gut affecting our central nervous system health, our brain health, gives us a unique opportunity to track the brain.”

Forward thinking

In 2020, Aaron Burberry was a postdoctoral researcher in the lab of then-Harvard Professor Kevin Eggan, who had developed a strain of mice that replicated the rare but fatal neurological disease ALS.

Burberry and Eggan created a second population of mice for a lab at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard. These animals were genetically identical to the first set and exposed to similar environmental conditions — same food, same light-dark cycles — but they never developed the ALS-like immune response and nervous system inflammation of their predecessors. That divergence sparked a scramble to understand the difference between the two populations, with the evidence eventually pointing to the microbiome. Some microbes present in the guts of Harvard mice were absent in the Broad Institute mice, the researchers discovered.

Burberry and Eggan also found that manipulating the microbiome with antibiotics or fecal transplants from the Broad mice improved or prevented ALS symptoms in the Harvard mice. Burberry, now a professor at Case Western Reserve University, has built on those results, recently identifying a protein produced by immune cells in response to gut microbes that drives up an immune factor called Interleukin 17A, which triggers inflammation in the genetically engineered mice. The FDA has already approved a drug targeting IL-17A, for psoriasis and rheumatoid arthritis, that potentially could be repurposed for ALS. In addition, human trials testing fecal transplant in early ALS patients have begun in Europe.

Work toward gut-based therapeutics for other brain diseases is also moving forward. Rudy Tanzi, an Alzheimer’s specialist and the Joseph P. and Rose F. Kennedy Professor of Child Neurology and Mental Retardation at Harvard Medical School, is developing a “synbiotic” to boost microbiome health. The synbiotic combines probiotics — healthy bacteria — and prebiotics, high-fiber compounds that encourage their growth. Meanwhile, Quintana is using the tools of synthetic biology to engineer microbes — bacteria, yeast, and viruses — to deliver medication that tamps down inflammation before it becomes a problem.

“We might never be able to tell whether it is actually the microbiome exacerbating it or whether it is just reacting to a deeper perturbation in the body,” Quintana said. “But we can look: Is there something in the microbiome that I can use as a biomarker? Can we exploit the microbiome, or perturbations in the microbiome, to develop novel therapies?”


A common sense, win-win idea — and both right, left agree  

Poll measures support for revenue-sharing plan on renewable energy that helps states, localities, and environment


Dustin Tingley.

Dustin Tingley.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Science & Tech

A common sense, win-win idea — and both right, left agree

Poll measures support for revenue-sharing plan on renewable energy that helps states, localities, and environment  

6 min read

Democrats and Republicans don’t see eye-to-eye on much. And they often don’t agree on various aspects of renewable energy. But a recent report finds there is one area in which they’re pretty much in sync: how certain national proceeds should be divvied up. 

Results of a recent national poll shows most rank-and-file members of both parties think some revenue from renewable energy produced on federal land should go to states and local communities adjacent to these projects. Right now, it all goes to Washington, D.C. 

“I figured that there would be bipartisan support just because of the way people talked about it, but I never expected those sorts of numbers.”

Dustin Tingley

The agreement surprised Dustin Tingley, the Thomas D. Cabot Professor of Public Policy and deputy vice provost for advances in learning, who led the survey. 

“I figured that there would be bipartisan support just because of the way people talked about it, but I never expected those sorts of numbers,” Tingley said. “It tells me there are a lot of very reasonable people, common-sense people, in both parties.”   

The nationally representative survey of 2,000 Americans, conducted last spring, showed that 91 percent of Democrats and 87 percent of Republicans, along with 87 percent of Independents and 88 percent identifying as “other,” support distributing revenues from solar, wind, and other renewable energy projects sited on federal land to host states and the nearby communities most likely to be impacted by them.  

Further, a large majority — 83 percent — said they believe renewables on federal lands have the potential to contribute to U.S. energy needs either “greatly,” or “somewhat.” The party breakdown of those responding “greatly” or “somewhat” was 93 percent Democrat, 72 percent Republican, 82 percent Independent, and 78 percent “other.” 

The survey also contained questions about how such funding might be allocated, with respondents suggesting 21 percent to local governments, 27 percent to the federal government, 22 percent to the state, and 30 percent to ecological restoration. 

The results were published in a recent report, “Federal Land Leasing, Energy, and Local Public Finances,” written by Tingley and predoctoral research fellow Ana Martinez, with support from Harvard’s Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability’s Strengthening Community Cluster.  

The poll responses reinforce the report’s contention that federal lawmakers should, in this case, do something that climate activists generally don’t recommend: follow the path forged by fossil fuels. 

Some 30 percent of the country’s land area is owned and managed by the federal government, mostly the Bureau of Land Management. Coal, oil, and other fossil-fuel-extraction operations pay significant rent and royalties to the government: $7 billion in 2023. Federal law also requires revenue-sharing payments to state and county governments, which amounted to some $4 billion that year.  

That money, Tingley said, provides critical support for public programs, including schools and county governments. With the exception of some offshore wind installations and the nation’s relatively few geothermal plants, revenue from renewable energy projects on federal lands goes directly to the U.S. Treasury. 

As of April 2024, the report said, 41 wind, 53 solar, and 67 geothermal projects were permitted on public lands, which, when all are built, will generate 17.3 gigawatts of power, about enough to power 13 million homes. At the end of 2023, there were 150.5 GW of wind and 137.5 GW of solar in the U.S., according to the U.S. Department of Energy. 

The different treatment of revenue-sharing between different types of energy generation makes no sense, either to Tingley or to many in the industry and in those nearby communities, said Tingley, who, in drafting the report, also conducted interviews with stakeholders. 

“At first, honestly, I couldn’t believe it,” Tingley said about his reaction when he understood the discrepancy. “It’s just so odd. And no matter the angle — if I looked at it as if I’m the Biden administration or a Democrat, or as if I’m a Republican, I was left just puzzled about why it was set up this way.” 

Tingley eventually gave up trying to figure out the logic and put it down to a quirk of recent political history. After all, when relevant legislation on solar and wind permitting was being drafted, the U.S. had little renewable energy, so it was a difference that perhaps didn’t matter much. 

Today, the situation has changed. Many more wind and solar projects have gone up. And the prospect of getting a significant revenue share might generate local support for renewable power at a time when the nation’s plans to fight climate change demand an increase in installations.  

Tingley pointed out that, though members of the two parties might align on this issue as a practical matter, the philosophy behind that agreement likely comes from different points of view. 

“There are tons of renewables in Republican areas, and I think people there ask, ‘Why are we keeping all the money with the feds?’” Tingley said. “On the Democrat side, you’re trying to push renewables. And then there’s a common-sense, kind of ‘plain jeans’ feeling of ‘Why are we treating different types of energy differently to begin with?’” 

Tingley said the agreement on the topic appears to extend from the grassroots to Congress, where proposals have been drafted on both sides of the aisle. Those proposals, however, have languished for reasons that are unclear. Any shift would take money from the federal budget, but the figures are small enough that they shouldn’t be deal-breakers, Tingley said. 

In addition, he pointed out, passage of such legislation would signal to voters that Washington still can pass common-sense policies that benefit ordinary people and local communities, in this case those on the front lines of the energy transition. 

“We’re not talking Wall Street; we’re talking Main Street and people living in rural areas,” Tingley said. “People on both sides, when presented with reasonable policy, will support it. There’s not enough of that being brought home by our elected officials because each side just wants to win for their own purposes rather than win for the American people.”  


Why be kind? You might live longer.

Take our research-based quiz on biological benefits of being good


Health

Why be kind? You might live longer.

three people looking at telomeres and data charts.

Illustrations by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff

1 min read

Take our research-based quiz on biological benefits of being good

Technically, when doing something nice for another person you’re not supposed to think about what’s in it for you. Yet it turns out putting others first is one of the kindest things you can do for yourself. In “The Biology of Kindness: Six Daily Choices for Health, Well-Being, and Longevity,” Harvard’s Immaculata De Vivo and co-author Daniel Lumera explore the scientific evidence that prosocial behavior can unlock longer, healthier, happier lives. We asked De Vivo — who holds posts at Radcliffe, the Medical School, and the Chan School of Public Health — to help us develop the following quiz based on her book.


1. What are telomeres?
2. Which of the following protect telomeres, according to research? Choose all that apply.
3. Having happy friends can make you happy. True or false?
4. Kindness — in the form of altruism, compassion, empathy, generosity, and selflessness — can be helpful in which of the following health outcomes? Choose all the apply.
5. According to a 2010 study, which of the following can lead to premature death at the highest rate compared to other factors?
6. Which common ingredient in diets of “Blue Zone” regions — geographic areas where people have longer life expectancy — is key to protecting telomere length, according to research?
7. What is LKM?
8. Research suggests people with higher levels of gratitude sleep better and experience less pain. True or false?

Go deeper

De Vivo recommends the following podcasts and book for those interested in learning more.


Helen Vendler, 90

At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Dec. 3, 2024, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Helen Vendler was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty.


Helen Vendler.

Helen Vendler.

File photo by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Campus & Community

Helen Vendler, 90

Memorial Minute — Faculty of Arts and Sciences

6 min read

At a meeting of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences on Dec. 3, 2024, the following tribute to the life and service of the late Helen Vendler was spread upon the permanent records of the Faculty.

Helen Vendler, Arthur Kingsley Porter University Professor, was born Helen Hennessy into a devout Boston Irish Catholic family in 1933. She died on April 23, 2024, at 90 years of age and is survived by her beloved son, David; her daughter-in-law, Xianchun; and her grandchildren, Killian and Céline (Harvard Class of 2020). Vendler is interred on “Harvard Hill” in Mount Auburn Cemetery.

The New York Times called Vendler a “Colossus of poetry criticism.” That is true, but how she would have smiled at the image of herself bestriding those turbulent seas! A truer image of her is as a formidably learned proponent of the educational importance of poetry — a knight of poetry, as one colleague described her, riding out to do battle for bards. She was also the most gracious and generous of colleagues, delightful in conversation, meticulous and cheerful in curricular deliberations. Her kindnesses to students and visiting scholars are legendary.

Vendler inspired generations of students at Harvard and beyond with her exquisite sense of poetic form and her swift grasp of what a poet is doing as an artist. Of her many famous books, she seemed proudest of her textbook for students, refined over years, “Poems, Poets, Poetry.” She wrote for everybody, showing newcomers to Elizabeth Bishop or John Ashbery how amply these poets reward close attention. To lifelong specialists on earlier poets, whether Shakespeare or Milton, Herbert or Keats, she revealed new and unsuspected strata of meaning. No other critic of our time, or, indeed, of the past century, has written about poetry with such illuminating power.

Proficient from girlhood in Latin, Spanish, Italian, and French, Vendler might have gone to any elite college then open to women but was forbidden by her devout parents to attend a secular institution. She therefore matriculated at Boston’s Emmanuel College, where she graduated summa cum laude in chemistry and mathematics. Proceeding on a Fulbright Fellowship to the Catholic University of Louvain to study mathematics, she soon changed to the arts and, in pursuit of them, traveled widely in Italy and France. To prepare for the Ph.D. program in English at Harvard, Vendler enrolled as a special student at Boston University. There she formed a lifelong friendship with her teacher Morton Berman (1924–2022), with whom she shared a passion for music and with whom she would later renew her travels in Europe.

At Harvard in the 1950s, when open hostility to women was the norm, Vendler still found wonderful teachers, among them the Miltonist Douglas Bush, the literary theorist I.A. Richards, the Renaissance scholar Rosemond Tuve (a visitor), and especially John Kelleher, creator of the field of Irish studies in the United States. Kelleher’s example inspired the future spokesperson for Irish poetry and world authority on William Butler Yeats and Seamus Heaney.

After taking her Ph.D., in 1960 Vendler went to Cornell University with her then husband, the philosopher Zeno Vendler. Later, as a single mother, she taught freshman writing at Cornell before moving on to appointments at Haverford, Swarthmore, Smith, and Boston University. She always wrote at night, after her son David had gone to bed. Her growing reputation as the finest critic of her generation brought her the honor of being the long-serving poetry critic for The New Yorker. In 1980 Vendler was invited to Harvard but, out of loyalty to embattled colleagues at BU, continued there in alternate terms until she joined Harvard in 1985. She was appointed William R. Kenan Professor of English in 1986 and later served as Associate Dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences and as a Senior Fellow in the Harvard Society of Fellows. In 1990 she became Harvard’s first woman University Professor.

Vendler’s books have all become classics, including the stimulating volumes from her five invited lecture series. In her 2001 Haskins Lecture for the American Council of Learned Societies, she quotes Joseph Conrad on “that mysterious power … of producing striking effects by means impossible of detection which is the last word of the highest art.” Not impossible of detection to Vendler, however, who wrote brilliantly on George Herbert, authoritatively on Emily Dickinson, fundamentally on Wallace Stevens, and indispensably on Seamus Heaney, Nobel Laureate and Boylston Professor of Rhetoric and Oratory. Her landmark study of Shakespeare’s 154 sonnets reveals time and again what centuries of commentary have missed. For example, our former summa in chemistry says the phrase “Time’s best jewel” in sonnet 65 describes not the beloved’s natural beauty but rather its “carbonized allomorph.”

The most challenging English-language poets of the past century have been Americans, successors of Wallace Stevens (who studied at Harvard from 1897 to 1900), on whose long poems Vendler achieved pioneering feats of exposition, as she did with the poetry of T. S. Eliot, Robert Lowell, Langston Hughes, John Berryman, Sylvia Plath, Lucille Clifton, James Merrill, A. R. Ammons, James Wright, Frank Bidart, Nobel Laureate Louise Glück, Rita Dove, Lucie Brock-Broido, and the Boylston Professor Jorie Graham, whose genius Vendler recognized early.

Vendler’s many honors include the presidency of the Modern Language Association; 28 honorary doctorates; the Jefferson Lecture, the highest honor the federal government confers in the humanities; plus election to the Norwegian Academy of Sciences and Letters, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, the American Philosophical Society, which awarded her its Jefferson Medal, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters, which, last year, awarded her its Gold Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Belles Lettres and Criticism. In 2023 Magdalene College, Cambridge University, of which she was an Honorary Fellow, commissioned an oil portrait of her in which she wears on a chain her Irish grandfather’s pocket watch. Vendler’s greatest delight — after her family — was the esteem in which she was held by poets whose work she revered, especially Seamus Heaney and Jorie Graham, who became close friends. She once quoted Czeslaw Milosz to the effect that every achieved poem is a symbol of freedom. This is rarely true of criticism, but it is always true of hers.

Respectfully submitted,

Homi Bhabha
Stephanie Burt
Stephen Greenblatt
Elaine Scarry
Gordon Teskey, Chair


Climate change experts see dark clouds ahead

Salata Institute panelists predict legal, regulatory setbacks and areas of hope as Trump administration prepares to take over


Peter Tufano (clockwise from top left), Jim Stock, Robert Stavins, and Jody Freeman

Peter Tufano (clockwise from top left), Jim Stock, Robert Stavins, and Jody Freeman.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

Science & Tech

Climate change experts see dark clouds ahead

Salata Institute panelists predict legal, regulatory setbacks and areas of hope as Trump administration prepares to take over

7 min read

Climate experts expect a second Trump administration to feature multipronged attacks on recent years’ climate change progress, with battles in the courts, in Congress, and involving the enormous administrative power vested in the presidency.

Supporters of efforts to reduce planet-warming fossil-fuel emissions should begin to focus on working to keep gains already made and prepare for a slowdown in progress, according to a panel of specialists gathered at a Salata Institute for Climate and Sustainability discussion Nov. 26 on likely changes ahead as a new administration prepares to take over.

President-elect Donald Trump has said he plans to ramp up oil and gas production, roll back the Inflation Reduction Act, end Biden administration regulations aimed at cutting carbon emissions and moving the nation away from fossil fuels, and withdraw once again from the Paris Agreement on climate change.

There may, however, also be some bright spots ahead, the experts said, stemming from some states continuing to push for carbon-free energy, the economic momentum behind ever-cheaper clean technology, and from the desire by American businesses to profit from the sale of green products and technology to the world.

“There’s a lot of interest in what lies ahead with the new administration and Congress,” said James Stock, vice provost for climate and sustainability and director of the Salata Institute. “This is pretty complicated, and it’s multifaceted.”

The second Trump administration, with a pro-business bent and taste for deregulation, will bear hallmarks of the first, but with control of the White House, Congress, and a friendly majority on the Supreme Court, the action likely will be more aggressive, said several panelists.

“This version of the Trump administration is not just prepared to roll back federal regulations, but to target the states and the private sector actors that actually want to replace the gap left by the federal government.”

Jody Freeman, Harvard Law School

One prime target for the new administration will be 2022’s Inflation Reduction Act, perhaps the nation’s most ambitious efforts ever to fight climate change. That legislation includes billions of dollars in tax credits, subsidies, and other financial incentives that aim to make carbon-free energy more attractive.

Although some 80 percent of the funding authorized by the legislation has been spent or is under contract, the Biden administration is pushing to get as much money out the door as possible before Inauguration Day, according to Jody Freeman, the Archibald Cox Professor of Law and faculty director of Harvard Law School’s Environmental and Energy Law Program.

That might not be enough, she said, as, with control of Congress as well as the White House, there may be attempts to “claw back” money already awarded and to revise or repeal the law. Among the most endangered targets is the $7,500 tax credit for electric vehicle purchases, she said.

The administration can do quite a lot without having to go through Congress or the courts, Freeman said. At the president’s direction, government agencies tasked with administering climate-related legislation can ease rules or change direction via the governmental regulatory process.

They can alter the government’s position in lawsuits and begin new suits against those pursuing climate-friendly action, as occurred in the first Trump administration, which encouraged an antitrust lawsuit against four automakers that were negotiating with California on auto emissions standards. Similar suits can be pursued against states that challenge federal initiatives, against environmental nonprofits, and against business groups that cooperate to help create a level playing field for competition.

Freeman said these efforts don’t even have to be successful to damage U.S. climate efforts. A widespread “chilling effect” will stem from the attacks themselves, regardless of merit, that may prompt people and organizations to be less aggressive in their activities, or to choose not to fight back.

“This version of the Trump administration, Trump 2.0, is not just prepared to roll back federal regulations, but to target the states and the private sector actors that actually want to replace the gap left by the federal government,” Freeman said. “If that happens to come to fruition, I think that is much more dangerous and much more far-reaching, even if it’s ultimately unsuccessful. All that litigation will help to chill activity, will help to scare people off, and intimidate action, and will also grind it to a halt by tying it up in litigation.”

The hourlong virtual event, “What Does Trump 2.0 Mean for Climate Change,” was moderated by Stock and included Freeman; Robert Stavins, the A.J. Meyer Professor of Energy and Economic Development at the Harvard Kennedy School and head of the Harvard Project on Climate Agreements; and Peter Tufano, Baker Foundation Professor at Harvard Business School.

Stavins, who had recently returned from the annual international climate talks, held this year in Baku, Azerbaijan, said Trump’s re-election loomed over the talks and was a regular topic of conversation among the delegates and other attendees. If Trump again moves to withdraw the U.S. from the Paris Agreement, the timeframe for withdrawal would mean that the nation would no longer be part of the global talks by early 2026.

Other countries, including the U.K., the European Union, and China, indicated they would step up efforts at global leadership in the absence of the U.S.

Beyond withdrawing from the Paris accord, Stavins said that some in Trump’s orbit want the U.S. to withdraw from the underlying treaty that establishes the international framework to collectively address climate change, the United Nation’s Framework Convention on Climate Change, signed in 1992.

Internationally, Stavins said, there is also concern that Trump’s stance may embolden other nations to follow suit.

The churning and uncertainty around the issue are what will be most damaging to the business community, Tufano said. Businesses generally look for opportunities to make a profit, which can occur in the climate space — though profitability will decline if IRA incentives are lost — but stability is key. In the absence of stability, Tufano said, business leaders often will wait to make decisions until the situation stabilizes.

“Businesses react negatively to volatility and uncertainty,” Tufano said. “The amount of jawboning and social media pressure and other kinds of pressure that can be put on firms cannot be underestimated.”

While some industries may be content to slow activities with respect to climate change until the business environment shifts again, some industries can’t afford to, Tufano said. Insurers are already on the front lines of the climate crisis and will still have to respond to climate-related weather disasters regardless of whether their connection to a shifting climate is in political vogue.

Similarly, the low price of installed wind power has made windy states such as Iowa and Texas prime locations for wind farms, a trend unlikely to be reversed. The fight to contain emissions of the potent greenhouse gas methane may also be past the tipping point where political opposition can stall efforts to curb emissions.

The recent launch of methane-sniffing satellites that share their data publicly provides a roadmap for natural gas companies to target leaks, a relatively straightforward task once the leaks are found, Stavins said. The fact that they can then sell gas that otherwise would leak into the atmosphere provides a powerful incentive to lower methane leaks, helping both their bottom line and climate efforts, Stavins said.

“We’re likely to see a lot more action in the oil and gas sector in the United States, but in other countries as well because it’s become newly profitable to fix those leaks,” Stavins said, “a point of optimism.”


Rising ‘epidemic of political lying’

Founder of PolitiFact discusses case studies from his new book that reveal how we got to where we are now


Bill Adair at the Berkman Klein Center.

Bill Adair.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Nation & World

Rising ‘epidemic of political lying’

Founder of PolitiFact discusses case studies from his new book that reveal how we got to where we are now

5 min read

Many Americans feel like the spin and outright lying in politics has gotten worse in recent decades. And that it’s not a good thing.

Bill Adair agrees. The founder of PolitiFact, the Pulitzer Prize-winning, fact-checking website, looks at the problem in new book, “Beyond the Big Lie: The Epidemic of Political Lying, Why Republicans Do It More, and How It Could Burn Down Our Democracy.” He was on campus recently to detail his thoughts in an event at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet and Society.

“For many years, no political journalist that I’d ever worked with nor myself had ever asked a politician: Why do you lie? And so it’s sort of this topic that is omnipresent and yet never discussed. I decided to discuss it, and I decided to ask politicians about it,” said Adair, the Knight Professor of the Practice of Journalism and Public Policy at Duke University.

“They make a calculation — am I going to gain more from making this statement that is false than I’m going to lose. It’s that simple.”

Following several years of research and reporting, Adair ended up zeroing in on about a half dozen people’s stories in his book as case studies that reveal what he calls “truths about lying.”

He also laments that calling out the fabrications and misinformation has not worked to alter the behavior of political actors and that the internet has made it all worse.

“Lying is not a victimless crime. When politicians choose to lie, there are often people who suffer, and often an individual who suffers a great deal, often someone whose reputation is damaged, whose life is turned upside-down,” he said.

At the event, Adair told the story of Nina Jankowicz, a disinformation researcher and writer who had been put in charge of an advisory board within the Department of Homeland Security in 2022 meant to help combat the spread of false information online. She ended up resigning under pressure after opponents of the board spread conspiracy theories online that her real goal was to crack down on free speech.

Adair also recounted the tale of Eric Barber, a city councilor from West Virginia, who became radicalized through Facebook to join the group that attacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Adair said that despite serving jail time, Barber still believes that the 2020 election was stolen and Donald Trump won.

Adair also discusses the case of Stu Stevens, a strategist for the 2012 Mitt Romney campaign. Stevens’ group produced an ad making the false claim that then-President Barack Obama was responsible for Jeep shifting production from Ohio to China. Jeep officials publicly stated that claim was false, noting that the company was expanding operations in China but “the backbone of the brand” would remain in the U.S. Adair said Stevens refused to admit the ad was wrong, insisting “it’s technically true.”

So why do politicians bend the truth? And where did it start? According to Adair, it’s a very calculated decision.

“They make a calculation — am I going to gain more from making this statement that is false than I’m going to lose?” he said. “It’s that simple. They want to build support for the base, and they believe that lie, in some small way, will help them do that.”

While both sides lie, Adair says his research finds Republicans do it more often. He writes in his book that from 2016 to 2021, 55 percent of the statements made by Republicans and investigated by PolitiFact were false, while 31 percent of those made by Democrats were.

“I asked that question of a whole bunch of Republicans and former Republicans who were willing to talk to me, and I heard a lot of answers,” Adair said. “One was that it’s just become part of their culture.”

“We went state by state, and we found that in half the states there are no political fact-checkers. That’s like having interstate highways where there’s no risk of getting a speeding ticket.”

Denver Riggleman, a former GOP congressman from Virginia, told Adair that Republicans view their work as part of an epic struggle, and that in that struggle anything is OK.

Adair took pains, however, to underscore that Democrats also lie. For example, a PolitiFact check on Joe Biden in May finds he wrongly stated that the rate of inflation he inherited when he took office was much higher than it actually was.

Overall, he went on to say, fact-checking is not working.

“Fact-checking is not stopping the lies. Fact-checking is not putting a serious dent in the lies,” Adair said.

Adair pointed to a study he’s been a part of at Duke, about states where there is state and local fact-checking.

“There’s plenty of fact-checkers who check politicians when they are running for president, but what about the senators and governors and members of the U.S. House?” he said. “We went state by state, and we found that in half the states there are no political fact-checkers. That’s like having interstate highways where there’s no risk of getting a speeding ticket.”

That leads Adair to his first recommendation.

“We need to be creative in getting [fact-checking] to more people, in using it as data so that we can suppress misinformation,” he said. He added that in addition to increasing the volume of fact-checkers in underreported areas, there needs to be more conservative organizations doing their own fact-checking.

“This can’t just be for people who listen to NPR and read The New York Times,” he said.

Adair suggests that AI might help fact-checkers by allowing them to track lies across multiple platforms. He also pointed to efforts by Facebook to fact-check posts on their site.

“I think that we need to reboot how we do this and how we think about this, because the lies are running rampant,” he said.


How China tariffs could backfire on U.S.

Economists say there could be unintended consequences, including higher prices, supply chain disruptions, and possibly opening door to improving Beijing’s ties to American allies


Beiijing business district skylie.

Beijing’s central business district.

Creative Commons

Work & Economy

How China tariffs could backfire on U.S.

Asia scholar says they could spark higher prices, supply-chain disruptions for Americans — and possibly help Beijing weaken our ties to allies

long read

President-elect Donald Trump’s longstanding plans to hit China with stiff tariffs would likely deal a blow to China’s already faltering economy, but it could also trigger some unintended negative consequences for the U.S. economy and foreign relations, economists say.

Trump warned last week that on his first day back in office he will impose 25 percent tariffs on goods from Mexico and Canada and an additional levy of 10 percent on Chinese imports. (He said during the campaign he would hit China with tariffs of 60 percent or more.) He said the nation’s largest trading partners need to take swifter, harsher action to halt the flow of illegal migrants and drugs into the U.S.

A revived trade war would further destabilize China’s economy, but economists and tax experts caution it would also harm the U.S. economy by increasing prices for American consumers and could lead to supply chain disruptions, labor shortages, and a currency war with China. In addition, it could provide China with new opportunities to get closer to traditional U.S. allies in Europe, the U.K., Australia, and Japan.

Rana Mitter, S.T. Lee Professor of U.S.-Asia Relations at Harvard Kennedy School, spoke with the Gazette about how China is viewing the prospect of new tariffs and preparing to respond. This interview has been edited for clarity and length.


The Chinese economy is already facing headwinds from a battered housing market and sluggish consumer demand. How is Beijing viewing the possibility of another trade war with the U.S.?

There are at least two different strands of thinking, which point in different directions. One of them is extreme concern about the way in which a tariff policy could essentially make China’s global export drive much more difficult to achieve, particularly into U.S. markets, which still remain very important despite the political difficulties between the two countries.

The other is much more about medium-term thinking. Some think that the imposing of tariffs could be the beginning of some new, hard-nosed, realistic negotiation with the United States, which could end up being a version of the Phase One trade deal that did exist under the first Trump administration. I would say the first is more dominant, as far as I can tell. But that second thought, that there might be an opportunity for China, is not absent.

“I think the biggest fear on the Chinese side at the moment is uncertainty on what the phrasing of ‘60 percent tariffs on goods coming in from China’ actually means — or the most recent statement that there might be an additional 10 percent.”

Rana Mitter

What worries China the most right now?

I think the biggest fear on the Chinese side at the moment is uncertainty on what the phrasing of “60 percent tariffs on goods coming in from China” actually means — or the most recent statement that there might be an additional 10 percent. Defining where goods come from isn’t simple; there are different rules of origin; there are different components. Many products that are very popular in the U.S. and the world — Apple smartphones would be a very good example — have many components from China.

So, the question is: What does it actually mean to impose 60 percent tariffs? Until you know the answer to that question, you can’t very easily plan for it. I suspect that is part of the intention. The aim is to make it clear what direction of travel is on this issue, not to give a detailed, laid-out plan as to how it’s going to operate. And for many of the Chinese, I suspect they see this as the starting point for negotiation, and they see a new Trump administration wanting to be on the front foot in terms of that negotiation.

In 2023, China fell behind Mexico as the top supplier of U.S. imports. The value of China’s share of U.S. imports in semiconductors, smartphones, and laptops was 35 percent lower than when Trump first imposed some tariffs in 2017. How damaging could a U.S. tariff of 60 percent or more be to China’s economy? And could China make up for that elsewhere?

First of all, yes, it would make things difficult. Clearly, export of manufactured goods into the United States is a very significant part of China’s economy. But it’s worth remembering that other key markets, including the European Union and Japan, are also part of China’s strategy of selling to highly developed, advanced economies. Nonetheless, the U.S. is a very important market, and in fact, even during the last few years of U.S.-China political controversy, trade figures between two sides have actually often gone up rather than down. So, it is significant, there’s no doubt about that.

In terms of opening up new markets, there’s certainly very, very strong efforts, and have been for some years, to try and do that.

Think about the signature policy that China has used in terms of international exports and foreign direct investment, what’s been known as the Belt and Road Initiative [a global infrastructure development plan to connect Asia with Africa and Europe to strengthen China’s geopolitical and economic influence]. In the last year or two, the term GDI, Global Development Initiative, has been much more widely used by the Chinese for the next phase of their plans.

The aim is essentially to create new and higher value markets in emerging economies — Southeast Asia, Latin America, and to some extent, Sub-Saharan Africa, although the latter is still of more interest in terms of raw materials than it is in terms of new markets for sales. Or think about EVs (electric vehicles), both Chinese exports of EVs and the export of intellectual property, including Chinese technology, to areas like Southeast Asia is becoming a bigger factor than it would have been four or five years ago even.

Nonetheless, these are still small markets compared to the number of Chinese goods that are sold into very advanced markets like the United States — half a trillion dollars according to U.N. figures.

Trump has been promising for some time to impose additional tariffs if re-elected. Has China been preparing for that possibility?

Yes, they’ve been preparing for quite some time for this possibility. Since it became clear that President Trump would likely be the Republican candidate, and then could quite possibly win, there has been plenty of strategizing in Beijing about what that outcome would mean in a whole variety of areas, including security, as well as trade.

On trade, the question of how China tries to move to protect their markets and also deal with the shaky state of the domestic economy has been a really key question. But there is no clear answer yet.

If you look at the economic policies the Chinese government has undertaken in the last few months, it involves repeated use of fiscal stimulus to try to stimulate domestic consumer spending. But since China is very, very determined to maintain a global trade surplus, it’s going to be much harder for them to use domestic consumption as a means of boosting the economy. So, exports still really matter.

Getting around that involves a policy decision they don’t want to make: to release large amounts of the savings that ordinary Chinese have in their accounts, reduce their trade surplus, and redirect spending into the domestic consumer market. That is something that has been advocated by Chinese policymakers for more than 20 years. They always step back from it because, in the end, exporting more has seemed more politically attractive and a solution more suited to where they are at the moment in terms of global supply chains.

Which countries stand to benefit most from a decline in Chinese imports to the U.S.? Is anyone poised to step in to meet U.S. demand?

You put your finger on the key issue. Filling that gap in short order will be very, very difficult. There is a reason that China has become so dominant over 30 years. If there was some reason — terrorists or a conflict or something else — that made China no longer viable, then India is probably one place that would attract investment on that front. But it would take time to bring its supply chains and its technical capacity up to standards.

Vietnam, but of course Vietnam borders China, and it’s possible that issues with supply-chain problems might well affect Vietnam more directly. There are also places where you can get niche manufacturing of various sorts done. But in terms of that kind of higher-value-added manufacturing, that demands technical skills, lots of components, supply chains, those are very complex things.

A slightly different issue, but not unrelated, is the dominance that Taiwan has on the very-high-end semiconductor market. That’s still a very vulnerable part of a global supply chain and that will remain relevant in terms of trying to shift capacity from China. Because it’s never just about China, it’s also about the things that get sent to and sent from China as part of the wider manufacturing process.

Harvard economist Larry Summers recently said if the U.S. takes a broad brushstroke approach to tariffs on imports, that may provide Beijing with a ready excuse for China’s own internal economic problems, further straining U.S.-China relations. Do you share that view?

I think that’s quite plausible, but I’d say there’s another “yes, and.” It also provides an opportunity for something else that China could do that the U.S. would find unattractive.

What’s being proposed is not just a 60 percent tariff on Chinese goods, but also 25 percent on all goods from Mexico and Canada. [And Trump said during his campaign that European Union nations might also face tariffs.] That gives China an opportunity to talk to the EU, to talk to mid-sized, independent economies like Australia, the U.K., Japan, and say, “Because we are all being targeted by these tariffs at different levels, it makes more sense for us to find some common cause.”

It would be a real reversal if the United States chose to undertake a trade policy that got the Chinese and Europeans closer to each other rather than the U.S., as is traditional, being close to its democratic allies.

So that may be an unintended consequence that could have lasting harm to the U.S. well beyond spiking prices for American consumers?

It opens an opportunity for China that doesn’t exist at the moment but would exist if there was a very wide-ranging, broad-brush approach on tariffs imposed on all imports. Since all advanced economies do import as well as export, they’re going to find themselves very vulnerable.

And if they feel the United States is trying to prevent exports into the U.S. rather than encourage them, they will look to other large markets. There aren’t that many of them of that size and even larger in the world, but China is very clearly one of them.


The 20th-century novel, from its corset to bomber jacket phase

In ‘Stranger Than Fiction,’ Edwin Frank chose 32 books to represent the period. He has some regrets.


Arts & Culture

The 20th-century novel, from its corset to bomber jacket phase

Machado de Assis (clockwise from upper left), Gertrude Stein, Colette, and Ernest Hemingway.

Machado de Assis (clockwise from upper left), Gertrude Stein, Colette, and Ernest Hemingway.

Photo illustration by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff

9 min read

In ‘Stranger Than Fiction,’ Edwin Frank chose 32 books to represent the period. He has some regrets. 

In his new book, Edwin Frank ’82 charts the history of the 20th-century novel through 32 key works, from Fyodor Dostoevsky’s “Notes from Underground” and H.G. Wells’ “The Island of Dr. Moreau” to Marcel Proust’s “In Search of Lost Time” and W.G. Sebald’s “Austerlitz.”

The Gazette interviewed Frank — founder and editorial director of the publishing house New York Review Books — about “Stranger Than Fiction: Lives of the Twentieth-Century Novel,” including why he selected certain titles, controversial omissions, and his hopes for the future of the art form. This interview was edited for clarity and length.


Your book traces the trajectory of the 20th-century novel through 32 titles. What made, in your view, those works and authors exemplary of that century?

The authors in the first and largely the second part of the book are authors who represent new beginnings and new ways of thinking about the novel. H.G. Wells invents a certain kind of popular fiction. André Gide invents a certain kind of art novel that stands apart from the popular 19th-century novels. Kipling and Colette are looking at what it is to be at the start of a new century and to be young people, and what it means to hope for a new world or to be impatient with the old world. I include Gertrude Stein and Machado de Assis because they represent new ways of writing that emerge in the New World, which of course, has a shorter history of producing novels. Most of those writers were at the beginning of the last century young people, and I wanted to map the new terrain, and these writers serve to do that.

In a way, the book has behind the scenes a single character: the 20th-century novel. You could say that at the beginning she dresses Edwardian style, not always happily, and by the end, she’s wearing a bomber jacket. I wanted to explore the changes that took place over the course of a lifetime of the novel as literary form.

In the second part of the book, the novelists are dealing with issues having to do with the conclusive destruction of the Victorian ways of life by World War I. They know they live in a new world altogether, one where all sorts of old codes have been destroyed, and the question is how to chronicle this new world.

“I thought that the book should be introducing people to wonderful writers who are less well known to the Anglosphere and suggesting ways in which books that sometimes seem daunting to read are entirely engageable books and still very much alive.”

Were you worried that many of the novels you chose are not well known and that those that are well known are not even read by many people?

I thought that the book should be introducing people to wonderful writers who are less well known to the Anglosphere and suggesting ways in which books that sometimes seem daunting to read — let’s say Robert Musil’s “The Man Without Qualities” — are entirely engageable books and still very much alive. I saw that as being, frankly, part of my own story of expanding publication and translation of books from different parts of the world so that readers learn to read across barriers that once seemed challenging.

You include American authors Ralph Ellison, Gertrude Stein, and Ernest Hemingway. Why not William Faulkner or others that some may see as glaring omissions?

The conception of the book was international, and the presence of American writers had to be circumscribed. And even so, certainly the largest contingent of writers in the book reflects my own linguistic competence. I speak briefly about Faulkner and state his importance. Several people said that the omission of Dos Passos is, just from the point of view of the international novel, perhaps the most glaring one because along with Faulkner and Hemingway, Dos Passos is undoubtedly the single most influential American writer on writers abroad in the last century. The panoramic novel he invents is a major genre, and I’m very fond of Dos Passos. It was with some regret.

With Stein, I wanted to suggest that she does pass on to, certainly Hemingway and Faulkner, a sense of American literature as posing a question of scale; what kind of sentence can be big or small enough for the almost unimaginable uncertainties that the new world opens up. We often forget how provisional a country America was, and perhaps still is. Stein realized how an open form could particularly address that situation. As she famously said, “There is no there there.” That is Stein’s sort of peculiar genius. Even if we don’t think of her as having written a book that is as beloved as any of those writers’ books, she made a remarkable contribution.

There are other novels I wrote about, but they ended up on the cutting-room floor. For example, Naguib Mahfouz’s “The Cairo Trilogy,” which looks back to 19th-century European novels, but also introduces a heady, lyrical, almost fantastical dream narrative that he takes from the ancient tradition of Arabic writing. And then there is also the surrealist Louis Aragon, who didn’t make the cut. I regret that because I wanted to bring out how surrealism, largely neglected or seen as a visual art in the Anglophone world, was a major contributor to the novel in the 20th century. Magical realism came out of surrealism.

What influence, if any, did the novels written in the 18th and 19th centuries have in this literary form in the 20th century?

The novel is a popular form starting really in the 18th century. But in the 19th century, it becomes truly popular, and the growth of literacy and industry allows novels to be produced on a larger scale for a larger audience. In a way, the 20th-century novel is impatient with the novel’s success. It’s impatient to prove that the novel is a fully serious form of art and not just a popular form of art. The novel is also skeptical of the political and social arrangements that have emerged in the 19th century; wanting more freedoms for individuals, sexual freedoms, artistic freedoms, and freedom to talk about the whole range of lived experience. If the 19th-century novels tend to balance the claims of self and society, saying that that balance is the precondition for a life of, as Freud would say, “ordinary unhappiness,” or even perhaps a happy life, in the 20th century, that balance becomes suspect, and the novel explores the ways in which things can be set out of balance.

Book Cover: "Stranger Than Fiction.".

What do Gabriel García Márquez’s “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” or Elsa Morante’s “History,” which are in the last part of the book, say about the end of the century?

The last part was the part where books surprised me most often. I didn’t quite know how I was going to end the book. I thought it should end the way a pop song ends, by fading out, but you have to fade out on a strong chorus. As it happened, the book was writing me as much as I was writing the book. Those post second World War books end up as a person does: entering middle age and looking back at a history that is in many ways already set. There are novels that stand as models of innovation, but they are now older novels. You get to a book like “One Hundred Years of Solitude,” whose very title announces itself as a book of a century, though it never mentions the 20th century, but it is a book, in some sense, about what is the meaning of these 100 years that we have lived through. And that struck me a good deal. Books like Georges Perec’s “Life: A User’s Manual” or Elsa Morante’s “History,” or García Márquez’s novel have a quality of trying to sum up, and I hadn’t really anticipated that. I was getting to the end of my book, and I suddenly realized that, in fact, a lot of books from the last part of the century were about summing up; they were about ending.

What are your hopes and concerns about the future of the novel and its place in the cultural conversation?

I would worry that the novel becomes a sort of a special property of the educated classes, that it becomes a little precious and loses its connection to the larger life of society and to a whole range of different kinds of people who have emerged in modern societies.

It strikes me that here in America we are living through changing times, and it’s remarkable to me how few novels there are that deal with — as Dickens, a brilliant stylist in his own right — financiers, scallywags and shameless politicians and what you will. I hope that those novelists do emerge. People always talk about how people no longer have the stamina to read long books, but then you have George Martin’s books, which are very long indeed, and people seem to gobble them up. Those books have a range of characters and events that shows an appetite to be comprehensive. And recently, Karl Ove Knausgård’s “My Struggle” too. I think, to some extent, that the literary novel is still a little overshadowed by the sheer range of accomplishment in the previous century and is struggling to find a new footing, a new sensibility and a new way of responding to the new world that we inhabit.


‘Because Larry has shown up for us’ 

Friends, colleagues gather for 70th birthday conference honoring economic scholar, former Treasury Secretary and University President Lawrence Summers


Nation & World

‘Because Larry has shown up for us’ 

Friends, colleagues gather for 70th birthday conference honoring economic scholar, former Treasury Secretary and University President Lawrence Summers

4 min read
Jason Furman (from left), Olivier Blanchard, and Brad DeLong speaking during the event.

Jason Furman (from left), Olivier Blanchard, and Brad DeLong.

Photos by Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

In introducing the final panel, Gene Sperling, who directed the National Economic Council for Presidents Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, remarked, “This is not a roast.”

But the recent economic policy conference marking Lawrence H. Summers’ 70th birthday was often roast-like — although always affectionate — interspersed with anecdotes from computer labs during Summers’ student days, the halls of Washington, D.C., and the president’s office in Mass Hall. Pointed comments about economic concepts prompted laughter, as did Summers — seated in the front row — who offered some good-natured rebuttals to the ribbing.

The gathering featured panels on Summers’ impact on modern finance, labor and public economics, and macroeconomics and policy. Speakers described a colleague and friend who has had a deep impact on those around him. His trademark probing questions have pushed others to think deeper, while his public positions have made a difference on topics as disparate as the recent rise and fall of inflation, passage of the Affordable Care Act, and his early recognition, in 1992, of the importance of educating girls in the developing world.

Lawrence H. Summers (pictured) speaking during the event.
Summers offered some good-natured rebuttals to the ribbing.

“No one was talking about this, but Larry did, and he single-handedly took that issue from something that education ministers care about to something finance ministers care about,” said former Meta chief operating officer Sheryl Sandberg, “And we all know the power difference between those two posts. Literally millions and millions of girls owe a change in their lives and futures to that speech.”

Today, Summers is the Charles W. Eliot University Professor and the Frank and Denie Weil Director of the Mossavar-Rahmani Center for Business and Government at the Kennedy School. His career spans studies at MIT and Harvard; the World Bank, where he was chief economist; the U.S. Treasury department, where he was secretary from 1999 to 2001; Harvard’s president’s office from 2001 to 2006; and the National Economic Council, which he directed from 2009 to 2011 under Obama.

Panelists painted a portrait of a scholar and public servant who is an innovative thinker and fearless in his thoughts and beliefs: Summers at one point remarked about a fundamental concept he still disagrees with, to knowing laughter. “I’ve lost that argument with the world, largely. I’m aware of that, but not to the extent of giving it up.”

Sheryl Sandberg.
Sheryl Sandberg described Summers’ impact on her career as profound.

Jason Furman, former chair of the Council of Economic Advisors and HKS’ Aetna Professor of the Practice of Economic Policy, described Summers’ ability to extract knowledge from those around him by focusing on a single issue or question and probing it until he was satisfied he had learned all he could. UC Berkeley Professor Brad DeLong said Summer’s questioning style went both ways: People learned more than facts and figures from him. They learned how to think differently.

“Larry’s nearly unique edge, I think, is an extremely, extremely sharp eye for what pain points are about to become salient, over and over seeing when things are changing in the macro economy so we really need to change our models to deal with skating where the puck is going to be,” said DeLong, who has been a co-author with Summers. “Because the important questions are about now and the next decade. You write even a good paper about an important question in macro from a decade ago, and you have written a paper about an unimportant question.” 

Sandberg, who graduated from Harvard Business School in 1995, said Summers’ impact on her career has been profound. She met him as a student, he advised her thesis, gave her a job at the World Bank when he was chief economist, and later at the Treasury, where she was his chief of staff. Through her career he was always willing to listen, she said, and she knows he listened to others even when they were facing public scrutiny, a time when many would shrink from associating with them.

“He never worried that he would somehow get dragged into someone else’s mess. He just showed up,” Sandberg said. “I know all of us here showed up for this day because Larry has shown up for us.” 


Score another point for the plants

Study finds 1:2 ratio of plant to animal protein lowers risk of heart disease


Photo of plant and meat protein sources.
Health

Score another point for the plants

Study finds 1:2 ratio of plant to animal protein lowers risk of heart disease

4 min read

Increasing the ratio of plant-based protein in your diet may reduce your risk of cardiovascular disease and coronary heart disease, finds a new study led by researchers at Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health.

According to the researchers, these risk reductions are likely driven by the replacement of red and processed meats. The researchers also observed that a combination of consuming more plant protein and higher protein intake overall provided the most heart health benefits.

While global dietary guidelines recommend higher intake of plant protein, the ideal ratio of plant to animal protein has remained unknown. The study is the first to investigate this ratio and how it impacts health, specifically heart health.

Risk reductions are likely driven by the replacement of red and processed meat with several plant protein sources, particularly nuts and legumes.

“The average American eats a 1:3 plant to animal protein ratio. Our findings suggest a ratio of at least 1:2 is much more effective in preventing cardiovascular disease. For coronary heart disease prevention, a ratio of 1:1.3 or higher should come from plants,” said lead author Andrea Glenn, visiting scientist in the Department of Nutrition. Glenn worked on the study as a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Chan School and is now an assistant professor in the Department of Nutrition and Food Studies at NYU Steinhardt.

The study was published Dec. 2 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition.

The researchers used 30 years of data on diet, lifestyle, and heart health among nearly 203,000 men and women enrolled in the Nurses’ Health Studies I and II and the Health Professionals’ Follow-up Study. Participants reported their dietary intake every four years. The researchers calculated each participant’s total protein intake, measured in grams per day, as well as their specific intakes of animal and plant proteins. Over the course of the study period, 16,118 cardiovascular disease cases, including over 10,000 coronary heart disease cases and over 6,000 stroke cases, were documented.

After adjusting for participants’ health history and sociodemographic and lifestyle factors, the study found that eating a higher ratio of plant to animal protein was associated with lower risks of cardiovascular disease and coronary heart disease. Compared to participants who consumed the lowest plant to animal protein ratio (~1:4.2), participants who consumed the highest (~1:1.3) had a 19 percent lower risk of cardiovascular disease and a 27 percent lower risk of coronary heart disease. These risk reductions were even higher among participants who ate more protein overall. Those who consumed the most protein (21 percent of energy coming from protein) and adhered to a higher plant to animal protein ratio saw a 28 percent lower risk of cardiovascular disease and a 36 percent lower risk of coronary heart disease, compared to those who consumed the least protein (16 percent of energy). No significant associations were found for stroke risk and the ratio; however, replacing red and processed meat in the diet with several plant sources, such as nuts, showed a lower risk of stroke.

The researchers also examined if there’s a point at which eating more plant protein stops having added benefits or could even have negative implications. They found that risk reduction for cardiovascular disease begins to plateau around a 1:2 ratio, but that coronary heart disease risk continues to decrease at higher ratios of plant to animal protein.

According to the researchers, replacing red and processed meat with plant protein sources, particularly nuts and legumes, have been found to improve cardiometabolic risk factors, including blood lipids and blood pressure as well as inflammatory biomarkers. This is partly because plant proteins are often accompanied by high amounts of fiber, antioxidant vitamins, minerals, and healthy fats.

“Most of us need to begin shifting our diets toward plant-based proteins,” said senior author Frank Hu, Fredrick J. Stare Professor of Nutrition and Epidemiology at Harvard Chan School. “We can do so by cutting down on meat, especially red and processed meats, and eating more legumes and nuts. Such a dietary pattern is beneficial not just for human health but also the health of our planet.”

The researchers pointed out that the ratios they identified are estimates, and that further studies are needed to determine the optimal balance between plant and animal protein. Additionally, further research is needed to determine how stroke risk may be impacted by protein intake.

Other Harvard Chan authors included Fenglei WangAnne-Julie TessierJoAnn MansonEric RimmKen MukamalQi Sun, and Walter Willett.

The Nurses’ Health Studies and Health Professional Follow-up Studies are supported by National Institutes of Health grants UM1 CA186107, R01 CA49449, R01 HL034594, U01 HL145386, R01 HL088521, U01 CA176726, R01 CA49449, U01 CA167552, R01 HL60712, and R01 HL35464.


Dance the audience can feel — through their phones

Engineer harnesses haptics to translate movement, make her art more accessible


Shriya Srinivasan with Anubhava Dance Company,

Shriya Srinivasan, artistic director of Anubhava Dance Company (second from left), performing at the Harvard Art Museums.

Photo by Jodi Hilton

Arts & Culture

Dance the audience can feel — through their phones

5 min read

Engineer harnesses haptics to translate movement, make her art more accessible

Shriya Srinivasan danced with precise steps, using graceful flicks of her wrists to depict a heroine holding a mirror and applying makeup and perfume, her expressions lit by hope and excitement. Behind her, centuries-old Indian watercolors depicted similar heroines.

The assistant professor of bioengineering at the Harvard John A. Paulson School of Engineering and Applied Sciences was performing a bharata natyam dance about a common archetype in Indian paintings and dance — a vasakasajja nayika, or heroine eagerly preparing to meet her lover — for a recent event at the Harvard Art Museums. Before the dance, she explained to the audience how the brain’s prefrontal cortex heightens feelings of excitement and anticipation in love by tapping into memories and activating reward centers.

“As a dancer, I aim to enter the emotional and physiological state of the character I am playing, inducing a faster heart rate or slowing the breath, to simulate anxiety or deep loss, for example,” she said. “Mirror neurons in the viewer then assimilate these cues and allow them to resonate with the emotional experience and catharsis of the character.”

Srinivasan combines her passions for science and dance as director of Harvard’s Biohybrid Organs and Neuroprosthetics Lab and co-founder and artistic director of the Anubhava Dance Company, an Indian classical dance ensemble that performs nationally.

A recent collaboration between the lab and Anubhava led to the creation of an app that allows audience members to feel dancers’ movements through a smartphone’s vibrations, a project featured last month on the PBS Nova docuseries “Building Stuff.”

“The scientific question at hand was: How can we enhance the experience of dance, reaching beyond just audio and visual input into tactile or other forms of sensory input?” Srinivasan said.

Her research and development team, which included Isabella Gomez ’24 and Krithika Swaminathan, Ph.D. ’23, developed custom sensing devices that are placed on the ankles of Anubhava dancers to capture and classify their complex footwork into patterns. A smartphone app transmits the movements into audience members’ hands. Srinivasan says the technology has the potential to make dance performances more accessible for the lay viewer, as well as visually- or hearing-impaired people.

“Choreographing a piece is akin to designing a system — both involve carefully crafting elements to achieve a specific effect.”

Shriya Srinivasan
Shriya Srinivasan

Srinivasan, assistant professor of bioengineering, in her office.

Photo by Grace DuVal

To make the haptic feedback stimuli convey the feel of the footwork, researchers set the vibrations to different intensity levels. Light, flowing movements were represented by vibrations targeting surface-level mechanoreceptors in the skin, while more intense, punchier movements penetrated to deeper skin layers, Srinivasan explained. The project culminated in a dance titled “Decoded Rhythms” for an audience at the ArtLab, where Srinivasan did a 2023-2024 faculty residency.

“For me, dance and engineering are similar in process,” Srinivasan said. “Choreographing a piece is akin to designing a system — both involve carefully crafting elements to achieve a specific effect. Just as engineers design a system to meet certain requirements, dancers create choreography to evoke a particular emotion or reaction from the audience. It’s about problem-solving and design.”

Srinivasan, who grew up dancing bharata natyam under the tutelage of her mother Sujatha Srinivasan, established Anubhava in 2015 with co-founder Joshua George in the hopes of creating a space for Indian forms in the American dance world while also merging arts, science, and humanities onstage.

“There’s a high level of rhythmic and mathematical complexity that goes into the choreography that we produce that might not always translate to an audience if they’re not familiar with the style of music that we utilize, or if they’ve not been trained in the dance form,” George said.

Since this collaboration, Srinivasan said Anubhava has been diving deeper into neuroscience, psychology, and mental health, incorporating portrayals of emotions such as fear and anxiety, which she said are not commonly explored in Indian classical dance tradition, into their recent performances.

“I find it immensely fulfilling to engage in work at the intersection of disciplines,” Srinivasan said. “Exploring a problem from different perspectives can help you envision solutions that aren’t visible from traditional silos.”

Srinivasan is especially interested in further research on how physiological changes in the body of a dancer portraying emotions onstage might evoke a similar response in audience members.

“There are vast opportunities to study why the world makes us feel the way we do. When I experience art, it evokes a certain emotional response in me. Understanding why is deeply fundamental to the work of an artist, but doing so with the lens of science gives me this tangible way to say, ‘OK, if I modulate ABC, I can get somebody to feel XYZ.’ To me, that’s nuanced insight.”


How HIV research has reshaped modern medicine 

Decades of scientific work turned the tide on a fatal disease and yielded insights into immunity, vaccines, and more


Health

How HIV research has reshaped modern medicine 

A bright circular virus particle shines in the center of an image against a dark background, with the edge of an infected cell seen in one corner.

Colorized transmission electron micrograph of an HIV-1 virus particle (yellow/gold) budding from an infected cell.

Credit: NIAID/NIH

long read

Decades of scientific work turned the tide on a fatal disease and yielded insights into immunity, vaccines, and more

In 1981, fresh out of medical school, physician-scientist Bruce Walker began his internship at Massachusetts General Hospital. One day, a young patient showed up with an unusual cluster of infections and cancers. Baffled and powerless to treat him, Walker and his colleagues could only watch as the patient quickly succumbed to the mysterious condition.

“I distinctly remember the first case we saw at Mass General,” said Walker, who is the Phillip T. and Susan M. Ragon Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and the director of the Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT, and Harvard. “The attending physician said that although we didn’t know what this condition was, we probably would never see another case like it.”

Two weeks later, another patient came in with the same set of symptoms. It quickly became clear to Walker and his colleagues that they weren’t dealing with a rare disease — it was the beginning of a new epidemic.

The baffling condition was acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) — the most advanced stage of infection with the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), which attacks and destroys infection-fighting immune cells. By 1993, HIV had become the leading cause of death in Americans aged 25-44 years.

In the 40-plus years since it was identified, scientists have made notable progress against HIV, transforming the infection from a death sentence into a manageable chronic condition, one that affects some 1.2 million people in the United States and nearly 40 million worldwide.

This decades-long quest for a cure for HIV has also yielded broader insights that have implications for the treatment of COVID-19, cancer, and other diseases.

From molecular insights to frontline medicines

Since the identification of HIV as the cause of AIDS, basic science and animal research have played a critical role in illuminating the virus’ complex behavior.

Some of the pivotal studies toward unraveling the structure, biology, and behavior of HIV have emanated from labs across Harvard Medical School. Using a range of imaging techniques, Stephen Harrison’s lab has identified key portions of HIV and studied the evolution of HIV antibodies, which is critical to understanding how the immune system interacts with the virus. The work of Joseph Sodroski, Bing Chen, and Alan Engelman has elucidated how HIV enters host cells and interacts with cell receptors, studying the structure and behavior of the virus’ protein envelope during this process.

This research has illuminated how HIV integrates its genetic material into host cell DNA, a crucial step in the virus’ life cycle. These insights have enhanced vaccine and therapeutic development by revealing how broadly neutralizing antibodies work and guiding the design of new immune-targeting strategies.

Early analyses of patient samples revealed that HIV is a human retrovirus — a type of virus that converts its RNA into DNA upon infecting a host cell. This tricks the host cell into copying the virus’ genetic material into its DNA as part of the cell’s normal replication cycle. The maneuver enables it to use the host cell machinery to make more viruses. HIV specifically goes after CD4 T lymphocytes or so-called helper T cells. These white blood cells coordinate immune response by signaling other immune cells to fight invaders. The virus begins by hijacking the cells’ molecular machinery to assemble thousands of viral particles, which go on to infect other CD4 T cells, spreading the pathogen throughout the body.

Today, the standard treatment for HIV is antiretroviral therapy (ART) — a combination of HIV medications, typically taken daily, that disrupt the virus’ replication cycle. When taken consistently, ART can lower the amount of actively replicating virus in the body — or viral load — to undetectable levels, lowering risk of transmission and allowing people with HIV to live nearly as long as uninfected individuals.

ART has also proved to be useful as a pre-exposure prophylaxis (PrEP) — an approach that can prevent up to 99 percent of sexually transmitted HIV infections from developing after exposure. Notably, a new class of medicines has raised hopes as a game-changer in HIV prevention. Two recent clinical trials of more than 7,500 cisgender men and transgender and nonbinary people showed that twice-a-year injections with the long-lasting drug lenacapavir prevented HIV infections in nearly all participants.

Yet, millions around the world are already infected. Once inside the body, HIV persists because of its remarkable ability to hide within healthy CD4 T cells, where it can lie dormant for years without triggering an immune response, said Daniel Kuritzkes, HMS Harriet Ryan Albee Professor of Medicine and chief of the division of infectious diseases at Brigham and Women’s Hospital.

Although these latent reservoirs of HIV do not actively produce new virus particles, they can reawaken at any time, leading to active HIV infection. This chronic immune activation among infected people — even when the virus is kept at bay — can amplify the risk for several chronic conditions.

“People living with HIV often have elevated markers of inflammation. This chronic immune activation can predispose people to long-term complications, including cardiovascular illness.”

Daniel Kuritzkes/
Daniel Kuritzkes, chief of the division of infectious diseases, BWH

“People living with HIV often have elevated markers of inflammation,” Kuritzkes said. “This chronic immune activation can predispose people to long-term complications, including cardiovascular illness.”

Indeed, research has shown that people with HIV have a somewhat elevated risk for cardiovascular disease, diabetes, kidney disease, and certain types of cancer. Now, the latest research from Advancing Clinical Therapeutics Globally — a global network of experts conducting HIV research — has found that daily use of statins could reduce risk of cardiovascular disease in people living with HIV by 35 percent. This pivotal work was conceived by and led by Steven Grinspoon, HMS professor of medicine and director of the Metabolism Unit at Mass General Hospital.

While this offers a path toward managing HIV-related complications, Kuritzkes emphasizes that the ultimate quest of research efforts remains achieving sterilizing immunity through a vaccine that halts the virus in its tracks, preventing infection from taking hold in the first place.

The roadmap to a vaccine

With some 1.3 million new infections a year, a vaccine remains the best way to end the HIV epidemic, said Dan Barouch, the William Bosworth Castle Professor of Medicine at HMS and director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center.

“We should use all of our prevention and treatment tools, including education and pre-exposure prophylaxis with antiretroviral drugs, to prevent HIV, but to really end the epidemic, we need a vaccine,” Barouch said.

Despite great strides with PrEP, Barouch notes, it will only reach high-risk individuals, and as many as half of new HIV infections occur in people who are not designated as high risk. Thus, Barouch notes, even if PrEP were available for free and accessible to everyone in the world, which is far from reality, it would still invariably reach a ceiling of population efficacy.

Yet, after 40 years of effort, the HIV vaccine field is at a crossroads. Since the dawn of HIV research, there have been hundreds of attempts at vaccine design, and dozens have made it to early-stage clinical trials, but only five have been tested in large-scale clinical trials.

“There is a lot of exciting basic, preclinical, and early clinical research, but currently no vaccine candidate has a clear trajectory for advanced clinical development,” Barouch said.

Why?

First, the ability of the virus to shapeshift within the host and across the population. The virus mutates rapidly, resulting in an astonishing genetic diversity not seen with any other virus.

“With HIV, you are not targeting a single virus, you’re targeting millions of different viruses,” said Barouch.

Another problem is the fact that the virus integrates itself into the host genome quickly — within days following infection — then goes into hiding, establishing a latent reservoir that can reactivate at any time. This means that a vaccine needs to induce rapid immune response that counters viral maneuvers very rapidly. No other virus seeds reservoirs so quickly, and no other vaccine has been capable of inducing such rapid defense.

Finally, the virus is cloaked in an envelope of sugar molecules — or glycans — that render it largely impervious to antibodies. There are only three or four targets on HIV that render it vulnerable to antibodies. Thus, for antibodies to work, they must be hyperprecise to latch on to these hotspots in order to disrupt the viral shield. This, Barouch notes, may be one of the greatest hurdles to developing a potent enough vaccine.

Among the most recent efforts was a vaccine developed by Barouch and Johnson & Johnson that was tested in Africa and in South and North America. The approach used a so-called “mosaic” platform optimized using computational biology to target multiple strains of the virus.

The researchers used computer design to create a mosaic antigen in the lab. The trial, which concluded in 2021, showed the vaccine had great safety but low efficacy — around 14 percent. A vaccine needs to be at least 50 percent effective, but ideally 70 percent or more, Barouch noted, meaning that it would have to prevent at least seven out of 10 infections.

Despite the disappointing results, Barouch said, the findings helped refocus the field of HIV vaccine research on the importance of neutralizing antibodies — the types of immune proteins that are capable of disabling rather than merely recognizing the virus.

To that end, Barouch and team have redoubled their efforts to design vaccines that create precisely such broadly neutralizing antibody response as well as spark a robust T cell response, thus activating both major arms of the immune system.

Lessons from elite controllers

In the early 1990s, researchers noticed a tiny subset of HIV-infected patients who were living healthy and symptom free without medication. These patients, who came to be known as elite controllers, had undetectable viral levels in their bodies. Their immune systems were powerful enough to naturally keep the virus from replicating. Between 0.15 and 1.5 percent of HIV-infected individuals are estimated to be elite controllers.

“In these individuals, the immune system is able to suppress HIV replication,” said Yu, whose lab focuses on the molecular and cellular mechanisms behind this remarkable immune response, with the hope of harnessing these insights to develop new antiretroviral treatments for HIV. “And in a rare subgroup, the immune system may even eliminate all cells infected with replication-competent HIV, curing the infection entirely.”

When Gaurav Gaiha, then a first-year student in the Harvard-MIT Program in Health Sciences and Technology, learned about elite controllers, he was captivated by the concept of using insights from these unique individuals to develop an HIV vaccine.

At that time, a prevailing scientific theory was that elite controllers had an exceptionally powerful T cell response to HIV. However, when Gaiha began comparing the T cell responses in elite controllers to that of people living with progressive HIV, he discovered something surprising: While T cell function in elite controllers was important, there was another important piece to this biological riddle. Gaiha therefore shifted his focus and instead began to zero in on the specific regions of the virus that these T cells were targeting.

In a 2019 study, Gaiha, Walker, and colleagues applied network theory to tackle this question. They treated each amino acid in the viral proteins as a node in a network, allowing them to quantify how central each amino acid was to the protein’s function. Their findings offered a breakthrough: T cells in elite controllers consistently targeted critical regions of the virus protein network — areas that were essential for its survival and losing or mutating them would significantly hinder the virus’ ability to replicate.

“It’s similar to key players in a network,” said Gaiha, now an assistant professor of medicine at HMS and a principal investigator at the Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT, and Harvard. “Key players keep the network connected, while others may be more on the periphery. If T cells target key player amino acids from these critical regions of viral proteins, you may have a chance to control the virus for a long period of time without therapy.”

These insights, Gaiha noted, have implications beyond HIV — they helped guide COVID-19 vaccine developments that stimulate T cells and induce a robust and long-lasting immune response.

Encouraged by promising results in humanized mice, Gaiha and Walker are now collaborating with two biotech companies to translate these insights into a viable HIV vaccine. The group’s viral vector-based vaccine candidate is set to enter a first in human clinical trial in Zimbabwe and South Africa in early 2025, while a second RNA-based vaccine trial is meant to begin in 2026 at Mass General.

“I am hopeful that we will see good outcomes from these initial vaccine trials,” said Gaiha. “But more importantly, I am looking forward to learning key lessons that will guide us, so we can continue to refine. We’re in this for the long haul.”

Ripple benefits beyond HIV

The search for a cure continues, but the sinuous 40-plus-year journey has fueled advances well beyond HIV.

For starters, many of the successes in the identification, testing, and treatment of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that ignited the COVID-19 pandemic, were built on knowledge and hard-earned experiences with HIV.

“Research on HIV really paved the way for the advances that were made with COVID, by laying the platforms for vaccine development that, in particular, the vectors that were used to generate immune responses, the mechanisms for rapid diagnostics, the understanding of viral pathogenesis — all were really contributed by work that had been done on HIV,” Walker said.

“If it wasn’t for the decades of HIV research, we would not have had the COVID-19 vaccines so rapidly.”

Dan Barouch
Dan Barouch, director of the Center for Virology and Vaccine Research, BIDMC

“If it wasn’t for the decades of HIV research, we would not have had the COVID-19 vaccines so rapidly,” Barouch said.

HIV research also equipped scientists with the tools and know-how to unravel viral structures and monitor the behavior of viruses inside their hosts. This work also led to the development of animal models that allow researchers to study how the body responds to vaccines and treatments and laid the foundation for the modern-day infrastructure needed to conduct clinical trials.

HIV research has catalyzed understanding of immune system function in myriad ways. For example, recent advances in gene therapy and CAR T cells were heavily influenced by research conducted in HIV infection.

“Fundamental mechanisms of how the immune system can recognize, engage, and target virally infected cells were first discovered in the context of HIV infection, and a lot of this progress has subsequently been translated to alternative disease contexts,” said HIV researcher Xu Yu, professor of medicine at HMS and a principal investigator at the Ragon Institute of Mass General, MIT, and Harvard.

For example, gene therapy uses lentiviruses as vectors to deliver therapeutic genes into the target cells.

“These lentiviruses are very similar to HIV, and a deeper understanding of HIV allowed researchers to use lentiviruses for therapeutic gene transfer,” Yu said.

HIV research also helped advanced the field of CAR T-cell therapy, which uses genetically engineered immune cells for the treatment of blood cancers. One of the first CAR T-cell studies was done in the context of treating HIV infection, more than 20 years ago.

“Experience gained with CAR T cells in this setting was instrumental in advancing them for oncologic indications,” Yu said.


Not so much the form, but the function

Brutalist, iconic Gund Hall undergoes 1st major renovation since opening in ’72. Now, hopefully, the roof will stop leaking.


Campus & Community

Not so much the form, but the function

Gund Hall renovation exterior.

Gund Hall on Quincy Street.

Photos by Jon Ratner

5 min read

Gund Hall may look the same but a major renovation has improved its energy efficiency and accessibility. (And, now, hopefully, the roof will stop leaking.)

Gund Hall, it is safe to say, was overdue for an update after weathering 50 Cambridge winters.

The iconic Quincy Street home of Harvard Graduate School of Design (GSD) is open after a major renovation this year, its most significant since the building opened in 1972. While the changes may not be readily apparent, the need was.

The hall’s concrete-and-glass stepped exterior, which encloses GSD’s beloved five-story, central studio area known as “the trays,” had badly deteriorated over the years, allowing moisture and cold air to seep in, and heat to escape. The space was so inefficient, it consumed nearly half of the building’s total energy. Before rainstorms, students covered their desks with tarps.

“The main purpose of this work is to get rid of the leaks once and for all. This building, for the 52 years it has been open, has always leaked. When it rains hard, you see the buckets everywhere,” said David Fixler, a lecturer in urban planning and design at GSD who chairs the faculty building committee, which has been advising on this first phase of what will be a multiyear project.

Other improvements include boosting the amount of natural light coming into the trays and making the adjacent outdoor terraces wheelchair-accessible for the first time.

For decades, the building’s unique design, as well as its historic and educational importance to GSD, have presented major obstacles to undertaking any substantive restoration that would fix these persistent problems without compromising the look and feel of the original design by Australian architect John Andrews, March. ’58.

Studio trays in Gund Hall.
The five-story, central studio area known as “the trays.” Nearly all of the original windows were badly degraded and couldn’t be salvaged.

“When John Andrews was originally tasked to design a new facility for the Departments of Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning and Design, he surprised his clients with a unique building that was at once solid and transparent and that prioritized the student body, united within an enormous, light-filled, single space,” Sarah M. Whiting, dean and Josep Lluis Sert Professor of Architecture at GSD, said in a statement. “Though much has changed since Gund Hall first opened in 1972, the careful rehabilitation of the structure underscores the school’s commitment to this same priority: our students.”

Gund, like other examples of mid-century Brutalist architecture, was constructed before the 1973 global “oil shock” and widespread awareness of climate change. It features large surfaces of exposed concrete, many windows, and is not well-insulated, all of which make it less than well suited to the harsh climate of New England.

“Philosophically, one of the compelling things about brutalism is the structure is the building. What you see is what it is. There’s nothing hidden,” said Fixler, an architect who specializes in mid-20th century building conservation. That means “sometimes they fail spectacularly, and they’re hard to fix.”

Nearly all of the original windows were badly degraded and couldn’t be salvaged. Above, clerestory windows on the roof were replaced with triple-glazed windows.

The curtain walls on each end of the building now have windows made from custom vacuum-insulated glass, a state-of-the-art material not widely used in North America. They provide energy efficiency and noise reduction comparable to traditional triple-glazed windows without the bulk, allowing the new windows to hew very closely to the original window profiles and glass sizes, while delivering two to four times better energy performance than standard glass. They will yield future savings in both carbon and dollars spent on utilities.

Exterior of Gund Hall.
Gund Hall features large surfaces of exposed concrete and numerous windows.

The project takes an aging facade that “had the problems of its time to a facade that is the best-performing glazing system anywhere,” said project architect George Gard, MAUD ’14, of Bruner/Cott Architects. The firm has restored other mid-century buildings at Harvard, including Smith Campus Center and Peabody Terrace.

With so many Brutalist-era buildings around the country now confronting similar challenges because of age, the School hopes the project serves as a model for others, by identifying innovative technology, techniques, and materials and helping define best practices.

“We see a lot of future potential as it becomes more common. And we hope that, this project being a high-profile building on Harvard’s campus, can be part of a growing acceptance of this technology,” said Gard.

Given the project’s unique complexity, Fixler, a conservation architect for many decades, has been incorporating the renovation into his teaching.

“What I find heartening is that [among] the students, there’s a growing understanding that it’s a really responsible thing to do to recycle old buildings, whether you like them or not, and to use that opportunity to test new ideas to make them more resilient, make them more sustainable,” he said.

Not everyone appreciates Brutalist behemoths like Gund Hall or Boston City Hall, often called one of the country’s ugliest buildings, or thinks they’re worth preserving.

“One of the biggest challenges, frankly, is getting people to understand why these are good, interesting buildings, and getting people to love them — because so many people hate them,” he said.

“There are a lot of people, especially younger people of the generation that I’m teaching now and my kids, [who] think these buildings are cool. But an awful lot of people of my generation just don’t.”


Ever wonder why your dog does this?

Study decodes neural mechanism that causes hairy mammals to shake their fur when wet


Science & Tech

Ever wonder why your dog does this?

Study decodes neural mechanism that causes hairy mammals to shake their fur when wet

6 min read

It’s a regular occurrence when taking our canine pals for drizzly walks and summer swims. But until recently, the biology behind the water-flinging, human-drenching, muzzle-distorting “wet dog shake” has mystified scientists working to decode the sense of touch.

Last month, researchers in the lab of David Ginty, the Edward R. and Anne G. Lefler Professor of Neurobiology and chair of Harvard Medical School’s Neurobiology Department, reported in work published in the journal Science that they’d used cutting-edge techniques to track sensory signals that underlie wet dog shakes from receptors on the skin to a part of the brain called the parabrachial nucleus.

Using tools — many developed in the Ginty lab — that allow researchers to isolate and trace single neurons and stimulate or block them using light, the researchers determined that the shaking behavior can be evoked by activating a class of sensory neurons called C-LTMRs and, conversely, the number of wet dog shakes evoked by mechanical stimuli decreases when C-LTMRs and the parabrachial nucleus are muted.

The researchers determined that the shaking behavior can be evoked by activating a class of sensory neurons called C-LTMRs.

Though unseen in humans, the motion is universal among fur-bearing mammals, serving as something of an early warning system that insects, dirt, water, and other substances are about to come into contact with the skin. Occurring in everything from grizzly bears to dogs and cats to lab mice, the response is innate, Ginty said, meaning that, though reflexive, it can be controlled by the animal. In humans, Ginty compared it to feeling a bug landing on your arm: You may jerk your arm or flick at it with your other hand with little thought, but it can be controlled if desired. In Ginty’s lab, researchers used droplets of sunflower oil applied to the upper back to trigger the response in mice who’d been genetically engineered so that specific neurons could be stimulated or blocked using light.

“One thing we’ve done over the last 15 to 20 years is generate genetic tools that allow us to study each of the sensory neurons that associate with the skin in isolation and that’s been incredibly powerful,” Ginty said.

The skin has approximately 20 different types of sensory receptors, including those that detect hot, cold, itch, and touch. Twelve or so receptors detect different types of touch, from a quick stab of pain to vibration to steady pressure to a soft caress. The signal triggering the “wet dog shake” starts in C-LTMRs, or C-fiber low threshold mechanoreceptors, which wrap around the base of a hair follicle. The receptor is one of the body’s most sensitive and can pick up the slightest movement of the hair or a depression of the skin around the hair’s base.

From the receptor, the signal travels along nerve cells into the spine, where it joins with the spinal cord. The signals then emerge from the spinal cord and travel to the brain stem and the parabrachial nucleus. Beyond enhancing our understanding of a basic and familiar mammalian behavior, Ginty said that the techniques developed have allowed researchers to overcome a major hurdle — understanding what’s going on inside the spinal cord.

“We understand the logic of organization of the neural circuitry that underlies visual information processing and sound information processing,” said Ginty, whose lab has been focused on unravelling the neurobiology of touch for decades. “For touch — for somatosensory information processing — we’re kind of in a black box trying to understand it because it’s been so challenging to access and record neural activity in the spinal cord.”

Though they’ve tracked the signal to a specific location in the brain, Ginty said many questions remain. An important one is understanding whether the pathway they identified accounts for all the wet dog shake response or, given the limitations of their functional manipulations, if there’s more going on than they were able to see.

“We’re struggling to answer that question, because the tools we typically use are rarely 100 percent effective in blocking one of these steps,” Ginty said. “So, you never know if a residual 10 percent underlies the remaining behavior or if there’s another pathway or another cell type that you’re missing. In this case, I guess it’s the latter, but we can’t be sure.”

Another important question in the work, supported by the National Institutes of Health and the Lefler Center for the Study of Neurodegenerative Disorders, is why, if C-LTMR receptors are located all over the body, do only those on the upper middle back trigger the response?

“It’s a very exciting time to understand brain-body physiology: how the body is represented in the brain and how the brain, in turn, controls organ systems of the body.”

David Ginty

From a behavioral standpoint, the answer is clear — that part of the body is out of reach of claws and paws and hooves for swatting or scratching — but that doesn’t explain how nerve signals from that part of the body trigger the wet dog shake while other signals that begin in the same type of receptor and go to the same part of the brain do not. Perhaps, Ginty said, the signals emanating from the nerves originating on the upper middle back propagate to unique regions of the parabrachial nucleus from those originating elsewhere on the body. Another possibility, he said, is that the signal from the upper back is somehow amplified in the spinal cord before reaching the brain.

Though Ginty is a dog lover, he said the work began not out of an appreciation for dogs but by accident. Dawei Zhang, then a graduate student in Ginty’s lab, was using optical tools to activate the then-mysterious pathway beginning with C-LTMR and noticed that every time he did, the mouse would give itself a shake. When Zhang and Ginty saw the reaction, they immediately realized what it was.

“It’s a very exciting time to understand brain-body physiology: how the body is represented in the brain and how the brain, in turn, controls organ systems of the body,” Ginty said. “Some of the new tools coming online are really powerful for helping us unravel these circuits.”


Polaroid gave her a shot. She helped revolutionize photography.

Meroë Morse — focus of Baker Library exhibition — led company’s researchers during innovative era 


Images courtesy of Baker Library Special Collections; Ansel Adams test photos. © The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust; photo illustration by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff

Arts & Culture

Polaroid gave her a shot. She helped revolutionize photography.

4 min read

Meroë Morse — focus of Baker Library exhibition — led company’s researchers during innovative era 

Meroë Morse had no formal background in business or science when she started at Polaroid in 1945, but within a few years she rose to become manager of black-and-white photographic research and later to director of special photographic research, a notable achievement for a woman in the 1950s and ’60s.

A new exhibition at the Business School’s Baker Library is putting the focus on Morse and her contributions to the development of instant photography — launched commercially by Polaroid in 1948. The collection, “From Concept to Product: Meroë Morse and Polaroid’s Culture of Art and Innovation, 1945–1969,” on view in Baker’s north lobby through April 18, draws on the library’s extensive holdings of the Polaroid Corporation Collection.


“The function of industry is not just the making of goods, the function of industry is the development of people.”

-Edwin Land, the founder of Polaroid

Meroë Morse.

A culture of innovation

Edwin H. Land, Polaroid’s founder, cultivated a creative culture within his research and manufacturing enterprise, building an interdisciplinary community devoted to technical and artistic excellence. 

Morse, an art history graduate of Smith College, found exceptional opportunities for women in the post-war era at Polaroid. She oversaw round-the-clock shifts of researchers conducting thousands of experiments in the company’s Cambridge laboratory, and met increasing demands for new Polaroid films as the popularity of instant photography soared. 

Meroë Morse and three male colleagues.
Morse’s affable and commanding presence among her male colleagues. 

Instant photography is launched

The first instant film and camera sold for $1.75 and $89.75 respectively on Nov. 26, 1948, in Boston’s Jordan Marsh department store. The camera measured 10½ by 4½ by 2½ inches and weighed four pounds, two ounces. It featured an optical foldout viewfinder, a three-element 135-mm f/11 lens, and shutter speeds from 1/8 to 1/60 of a second. All 56 cameras sold out that day.

Polaroid camera patent from October 6, 1945.

Research in black and white

In 1948, Morse became the laboratory supervisor responsible for photographic materials. The earliest Polaroid film, Type 40, produced sepia-toned prints that had limited tonal range. Morse and her lab looked to produce black-and-white images that exhibited greater detail and a color palette more familiar and appealing to consumers. In 1950, after two years of intensive work, the company introduced black-and-white film Type 41. The film produced prints that exhibited finer detail and, as U.S. Camera enthused, created “pictures-in-a-minute of exceptional tonal values.” The Detroit Free Press reported that Land credited Morse with “valuable assistance in research that led to the new film.”

Meroë Morse poses for Polaroid test photos. One photo is her posing with a large white hat. And the other photo is her standing elegantly with a pearl necklace.
Meroë Morse poses for Polaroid test photos.

Ansel Adams and Polaroid

Morse also served as chief liaison to Ansel Adams, the renowned landscape photographer. A principal consultant for Polaroid from 1948 until his death in 1984, Adams tested the company’s prototype cameras and film. He reviewed technical and design aspects of Polaroid prototypes, from the wording of instruction manuals to the tonal values of finished prints.

Photo by Ansel Adams of an older woman.

Ansel Adams Polaroid test photos.

Ansel Adams test photos. © The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust.

Photo by Ansel Adams of Edwin Land.

Portrait of Edwin Land.

Ansel Adams test photos. © The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust.

Photo by Ansel Adams of an animal skull.

Polaroid test photo from the Southwest.

Ansel Adams test photos. © The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust.

Photo by Ansel Adams of a waterfall.

Polaroid test photo from California.

Ansel Adams test photos. © The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust.

The exhibition was organized by Baker Library Special Collections and Archives, with support from the de Gaspé Beaubien Family Endowment. This text is drawn from the exhibition catalog. Find more information at the Baker Library website.


Updating their 3-word bios

Juniors who talked to us when they first arrived here — and again as sophomores — reflect on how they’ve changed


View outside Littauer Building.

Passing through an autumn campus at Harvard University.

Photos by Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Campus & Community

Updating their 3-word bios

8 min read

Juniors who talked to us when they first arrived here — and again as sophomores — reflect on how they’ve changed

Gazette photographer Stephanie Mitchell has been conducting a bit of an experiment inspired by her own college years — specifically the address by Nora Ephron to Wellesley’s Class of 1996 expressing, “You are not going to be you, fixed and immutable you, forever.” She met with a group of Harvard students during their first year and sophomore year, photographed them, and asked them to describe themselves in three words. The students, now juniors, participated in the exercise once again. The three words they chose appear below in gray (2022), dark gray (2023), and black (2024).


Sofia Chavez.
First Year
Sofia Chavez is pictured.
Sophomore Year
Sofia Chavez.
Junior Year

Sofia Chavez

Currier House

When we first spoke to Chavez in 2022, the student from Hidalgo, Mexico, noted that she was “learning how to be independent for the first time, leaving home and my country.”

This year, she said: “I’m growing. I’m an adult. I have the freedom of choosing my own path, making decisions, making mistakes, and learning from them.”

In all three of her interviews, Chavez described herself as “free” and independent.” She added a new descriptor this year: creativity. “It gives you the tools to solve problems, not only academically, but in your life.”

As a first-year, she listed women’s and gender studies and sociology as academic interests. By the fall of her sophomore year, she was leaning toward a government concentration in the law and justice track with a secondary in economics. Chavez has since declared a government concentration with a language citation in French. She is considering a senior thesis in political theory and a career in law.

“As a perfectionist or overachiever, you always want to have things in control,” said Chavez, but lately she is happier because “I don’t think about those expectations anymore, only my own.”


Bradley Chinhara.
First Year
Bradley Chinhara.
Sophomore Year
Bradley Chinhara.
Junior Year

Bradley Chinhara

Lowell House

Two years ago, Zimbabwe native Chinhara characterized himself as an “adventurous” person with “diverse interests,” from electrical engineering to rugby to playing the marimba. He credited Christianity and love of family as guiding forces.

“I still pray every day. I still love my religion,” said Chinhara. He’s added two new descriptors this year.

“Grateful, because I wake up every day, and I realize that I go to Harvard, which was one of my biggest dreams growing up. … Grateful for my mom. She passed away, but she lived a beautiful life. … And then composed, because I’m a junior now. I know how things work. I’ve made mistakes, and I’ve learned from them. I’m now at a point where I know what I want. I know how to pursue it.”

Chinhara’s interest in computer science hasn’t wavered as he tilts toward tech entrepreneurship and product management. In 2023, he launched a software development startup. He said he will declare a secondary in economics and is considering business school.

Last spring, he “started reaching out more, talking to more people, going to office hours.”

“It dramatically improved my academic life, my social life, my mental health.”


Myra Bhathena.
First Year
Myra Bhathena.
Sophomore Year
Myra Bhathena ’26.
Junior Year

Myra Bhathena

Pforzheimer House

“Building relationships is the most important thing to me,” said Bhathena in her first-year interview. That theme continues today. She feels energized, she said, “reflecting on the people who have gotten me here.”

“It brings me back to my family — my grandparents, my parents, my siblings. I was lucky to spend the end of the summer with a lot of them, and they always ground me.”

Bhathena has completed many foundational requirements for her economics concentration and is turning to her secondary in global health and health policy. Interning at Boston Children’s Hospital doing research this past summer has only reaffirmed her pre-med track. “I am really excited to dedicate my career to medicine and to caring for people.”

She has moved into mentorship roles in clubs and the classroom, for example serving as a Teaching Fellow for EC10. “I love teaching, and I’m excited to meet new freshmen in the class who are just as nervous and scared as I was.”

This year, “I am a more balanced person,” Bhathena said. “Time has given me more freedom to just be myself and take some deep breaths and enjoy my last two years here.”


Dara Omoloja.
First Year
Dara Omoloja.
Sophomore Year
Dara Omoloja.
Junior Year

Dara Omoloja

Leverett House

Omoloja spent the summer back home in Wisconsin. “I had a lot of time to think and contemplate my priorities. There’s so much I need to do and that I want to do in this life.”

In her first Gazette interview Omoloja said she was most looking forward to “immense personal discovery that everyone mentions when thinking about college.”

Now a junior cognizant of how quickly time is passing, she said, “In the past, I spent so much time looking down, be that at my phone, or as I walk, looking at the floor, because I’m thinking about how all these people are seeing me. But now, I really want to pay attention, to be present. Every time I look around, I think, ‘Wow, this world is so pretty, and I want to just take that in more.’”

Reflecting on last year, Omoloja said, “I learned to advocate for myself more. … My biggest lesson was although it is important to show kindness and to have community, it shouldn’t go at the expense of your personal comfort and happiness. … I’m more comfortable in my identity this year. I’m very happy to be me.”

“Ambitious,” a word she used to define herself in 2022, re-emerged as she studies for the MCAT and takes the courses “Medicine and Health in America” and “Therapeutic Rationalities,” concrete steps toward becoming a doctor.


Austin Wang.
First Year
Austin Wang.
Sophomore Year
Austin Wang.
Junior Year

Austin Wang

Lowell House

Wang describes himself as both excited and relaxed this year. “I think believing in yourself and having confidence is really important,” and when things become hectic “it’s good to be relaxed and Zen.”

Rejuvenated from a summer of seeing friends and family, doing genetic computational research at the Medical School, and volunteering at the Harvard Square Homeless Shelter, Wang also feels a bit melancholic.

“I looked down at my Pset, and I look up, and it’s already junior year. It went by really quickly … I’m looking forward to the second half.”

Since his last interview, the Canada native has declared his concentration in chemical and physical biology with a secondary in computer science and has continued to find ways to break out of his comfort zone, a goal he emphasized in previous years.

Ringing the Lowell House bells every Sunday has been “super fun.” He shares the recruitment joke for the bells, known for waking up students at the bright hour of 1 p.m. on Sundays: “If you feel like you’re too well liked, feel free to join!”


Nali Gone.
First Year
Nali Gone.
Sophomore Year
Nali Gone.
Junior Year

Nali Gone

Eliot House

Creativity has been a constant for Gone over the past three years. “It’s a great way for me to engage with the world and understand what people think and feel.”

This year, “I’m not as worried about what’s going to happen. I’m just living in the moment. I am really trying to put myself out there and try new things. Now is such a formative time in my life.”

Gone has declared a concentration in women, gender, and sexuality with a secondary in psychology, and is currently taking a history class about the relationship between guns, property, and power, as well as a First Amendment seminar. “I’m in my amendment era, one might say.”

Last year Gone helped stage-manage for the Harvard-Radcliffe Dramatic Club musical “Jekyll and Hyde” and the musical comedy “The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee,” and continues this year with the musical “Pippin.”

A key lesson from sophomore year: how to find balance and take breaks between time commitments.


Riley Flynn.
First Year
Riley Flynn.
Sophomore Year
Riley Flynn.
Junior Year

Riley Flynn

Eliot House

Softball continues to be a focus for Flynn, a rise ball and curveball pitcher who was named Ivy League Rookie of the Year in 2023. While athletics can be time-consuming, she enjoys the camaraderie while traveling the country with her teammates.

Last season, Flynn underwent elbow surgery. “I’m finding my way, working through rehab, and my team has been great through all of that, supporting me and helping me. I should be able to play in the spring.”

What else has changed? “My first years were definitely more about exploring, and this year, I have found things that I am passionate about, whether it’s making friends, playing sports, what I’m studying, and I’m definitely going to go deeper into that in the next two years.”

She’s delving into her concentration in human developmental and regenerative biology with a neuroscience secondary, taking courses in organic chemistry and psychopharmacology.

“I feel that I’ve found my place here and now it’s more about growing in order to continue finding people and places that I love.”


Rhodes scholars share their Oxford ambitions  

8 students to pursue social, political, computational sciences


From left top row Aneesh Muppidi, Sofia Corona, Thomas Barone, Laura Wegner; second row,
Matthew Anzarouth, Ayush Noori, Lena Ashooh, Shahmir Aziz.

From left top row Aneesh Muppidi, Sofia Corona, Thomas Barone, Laura Wegner; second row, Matthew Anzarouth, Ayush Noori, Lena Ashooh, Shahmir Aziz.

Photos by Stephanie Mitchell and Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographers; photo illustration by Liz Zonarich/Harvard Staff

Campus & Community

Rhodes scholars share their Oxford ambitions  

long read

8 students to pursue social, political, computational sciences 

Whether examining animal ethics, combating AI bias, or weighing the values essential to a functioning democracy, Harvard’s newest Rhodes Scholars have made their mark across a wide expanse of disciplines. These eight seniors, representing four countries and several U.S. states, will continue their academic pursuits at the University of Oxford next year. They shared their plans, accomplishments, and what it was like to receive the news of their award.   


Matthew Anzarouth

Matthew Anzarouth.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

Matthew Anzarouth

Montreal, Canada

Concentration: Social studies

Matthew Anzarouth was at home with family in Montreal when he got the phone call that he had won a Rhodes Scholarship for Canada. Anzarouth was one of two recipients from the region that includes Ontario, Quebec, and the Maritime provinces.

“I felt a mix of shock, excitement, and profound gratitude,” Anzarouth said. “This opportunity is an extraordinary privilege, and I’m really keen to make the most of it.”

Anzarouth is currently writing a thesis on Canadian federalism and multiculturalism, with an emphasis on language policy in Quebec and Indigenous self-determination. The Mather House resident is using political theory to examine the challenge of reconciling universal individual rights with group rights specific to Canada’s national minorities.

“I’m using political theory as a way of understanding — and hopefully better resolving — the challenge of coexistence in a culturally diverse federation,” Anzarouth said. “The thesis work has helped me stay engaged with my country’s politics and reflect on how I want to contribute.”

On campus, Anzarouth is an undergraduate research fellow at the Weatherhead Center for International Affairs, and an editor and podcast host for the Harvard Political Review

At Oxford, he hopes to continue his studies of political theory, focusing on questions of how to balance competing claims for cultural preservation and how to balance power between legislative and judicial bodies of government. He hopes to eventually attend law school.


Lena Ashooh

Lena Ashooh.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Lena Ashooh

Shelburne, Vermont

Concentration: Special concentration in animal studies

The summer after her first year on campus, Lena Ashooh worked as a research assistant in Puerto Rico, studying the impacts of natural disaster and trauma on the behavior of a colony of free-ranging macaque monkeys. It was a pivotal moment for the Kirkland House resident, who said it felt like observing an “extremely sophisticated society of individuals.”

“That was where I initially had the idea that, were the conditions that animals are in to change completely, they might behave in ways that we never imagined,” Ashooh said. “This led me, in philosophy, to working out how we might wrong animals in the beliefs we have about them and to be interested in how we’re managing land, the decisions we’re making about who has access to land, and who should be involved in the decision-making process.”

Ashooh designed a special concentration in animal studies, combining political philosophy, government, and animal psychology. She is an undergraduate fellow at the Edmond and Lily Safra Center for Ethics, has written for the Harvard Review of Philosophy, and co-founded Harvard College Animal Advocates. Off-campus, she works as a lab manager in animal cognition scientist Irene Pepperberg’s parrot lab at Boston University.

“I say that to study animal studies is to study social injustice and gives us a new way of understanding how oppression and violence occurs, and how moral complacency and inaction occur,” said Ashooh, who is planning to eventually attend law school. “One of the key questions that animal studies allows us to address is: How is it that people can be led to look at suffering and decide not to act on it?”

Ashooh hopes to study philosophy next year, focusing on the question of what it means to treat and respect an animal as an individual.


Shahmir Aziz

Shahmir Aziz.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Shahmir Aziz 

Lahore, Pakistan 

Concentration: Biomedical engineering and mathematics, secondary in computer science, language citation in French 

As an undergraduate researcher in different Harvard labs, Shahmir Aziz has analyzed the impact of physical exertion on the glycolytic levels of diabetes patients and has investigated nano-lipids as potential drug delivery vesicles. As an intern at Novo Nordisk, he has focused on optimization of drug-delivery processes. 

He wants to keep working on the cutting edges of biotechnology, and he wants to help others do so as well, in his native Pakistan. 

“In the long run, I hope to help start a culture of startups and biotech in Pakistan, so that students and other innovators can grow out their ideas,” said the Adams House resident named one of two Rhodes Scholars for Pakistan.  

A first-year course in quantitative physiology taught by Linsey Moyer solidified Aziz’ chosen field of study. He also took courses in government and political philosophy, feeding an equal passion for international relations. 

At Oxford, Aziz plans to pursue a master’s in bioengineering, followed by a second degree in diplomacy and global governance — arenas in which he’s also made meaningful contributions on campus.

A member of the leadership team of Harvard’s International Relations Council, Aziz helped the University’s Model United Nations team win two major intercollegiate competitions. “The opportunity I have cherished most at Harvard has been to interact with students from all extremes and opposites of background, pursuing all nature of subjects, and dreaming all ranges of noble dreams,” Aziz wrote in his scholarship application. 

Some of those interactions have come in his four years playing Harvard Club Tennis, as a sports editor with The Harvard Crimson, and as a course assistant in the Department of Mathematics. 


Tommy Barone

Thomas Barone.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

Tommy Barone

Little Falls, New Jersey

Concentration: Social studies

Tommy Barone wants to understand what people believe, and why.

Barone currently is studying what he calls a “crisis of liberalism,” or the philosophical values essential to healthy democracy. In particular he’s interested in how best to understand the beliefs of people engaging in illiberalism in democratic societies.

“It’s so easy to create a narrative about why something important or worrying or disruptive in society is happening that serves your ends,” Barone said. “I think it’s a civic obligation that we listen to what people have to say and try to understand them. If you are trying to theorize something that involves people without speaking and listening to the people who are part of that phenomenon, you’re going to be missing something.”

Barone said that when he learned he had been named a Rhodes Scholar, all he could do was start “breathing heavily.”

“I didn’t cry until I called my parents,” Barone recalled. “Then I cried. Then I had to get it together to talk to the judges afterward.” 

The Currier House resident, who hopes to pursue journalism in the future, is co-chair for the editorial board at The Crimson. Their coverage won first place for editorial writing in collegiate journalism in the Society of Professional Journalists’ 2023 Mark of Excellence Awards.

“I’ve had the unique challenge, but also the really educational, enriching experience, of being tasked with bringing people together to have difficult discussions in one of the most challenging years on campus in decades,” said Barone, who plans to study history at Oxford. “I’ve had the privilege to publish a really broad diversity of perspectives on a range of important issues on campus.”


Sofia Corona

Sofia Corona.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Sofia Corona

Miami, Florida, and Pereira, Colombia    

Concentration: Applied mathematics and economics, secondary in government 

From watching her mother commute several hours a day for work in Maryland to biking throughout her community, Sofia Corona learned early on that how people move is fundamental to the human experience. 

Helping people get where they need to go — within cities, towns, and systems that benefit all — has become her life’s work. “I’m interested in how communities are engaged in infrastructure planning, especially when the benefits of that infrastructure are collective and widespread, but the burdens are localized,” said Corona, a Currier House resident graduating in December. 

Corona, who hopes to work in the transportation sector, thinks seismic shifts toward sustainable modes of transportation are possible. “At the same time, our transportation networks are often superimposed on inherited, segregated landscapes, both racially and socioeconomically,” she said. “We can’t be agnostic to that.” 

At Oxford, Corona’s master’s coursework will contextualize mobility systems within broader economic development and sustainability frameworks. At Harvard, she worked in the Allen Lab for Democracy Renovation, conducting research on inclusive decision-making in renewable energy projects. She also spent time in the MIT Transit Lab. Her professional experience includes internships at Uber, BMW, the U.S. Department of Transportation, and McKinsey & Co. 

Her interests have taken her all over the world, from working on carbon dioxide pricing for the Chilean Ministry of Finance to collaborating with researchers at the Technical University of Munich on a tool that advises local transit agencies. 

The Colombian American was a walk-on on Harvard’s varsity sailing team and is an avid mountaineer with the summits of Denali and Kilimanjaro among her feats, and she has run the Boston, New York, and Berlin marathons. Among her most cherished moments at Harvard have been as a dog-walker to Currier House dogs Huckleberry and Ari.  


Aneesh Muppidi 

Aneesh Muppidi.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

Aneesh Muppidi 

Schenectady, New York 

Concentration: Computer science and neuroscience, concurrent master’s in computer science 

Waiting in a room with other Rhodes Scholar finalists, Aneesh Muppidi did a homework problem set and chatted about South Asian politics, having already made peace with not winning. 

“In my head I thought, ‘This has been an amazing process, but now it’s time to go back to the real world,’” the Lowell House resident said. 

Then, he heard his name.   

“I called my little brother first,” he said, followed by his parents and two best friends. 

Muppidi has spent time mulling the question Alan Turing famously posed in 1950: Can machines think? He’s come to believe that understanding human intelligence — and computationally scaling up that intelligence — can solve some of the world’s biggest problems, such as diagnosing complex medical conditions or giving personalized tutors to every child in every classroom. 

At Harvard, he’s immersed himself in the power and promise of artificial intelligence through projects on deep reinforcement learning in Assistant Professor Heng Yang’s Computational Robotics Lab; particle filter machine learning algorithms with the Fiete Lab at MIT; and autonomous agent detection with Professor Sam Gershman’s Computational Cognitive Neuroscience Lab.

Outside the lab, Muppidi is equally passionate about AI policy and ethics. Ensuring technologies are developed safely is a cornerstone of Muppidi’s research, which he plans to continue while pursuing master’s coursework in computer science and public policy at Oxford. 

Muppidi served as president of Harvard Dharma and as president of the Harvard Computational Neuroscience Undergraduate Society. He includes among his mentors Sanskrit instructor Nell Shapiro Hawley, now at Vassar College, with whom he took two years of the ancient language of India. “How she taught had a very beautiful effect on my life, in the sense that I was able to get closer to my spiritual identity, who I am as a person, and what I believe in.” 


Ayush Noori.

Stephanie Mitchell/Harvard Staff Photographer

Ayush Noori

Bellevue, Washington 

Concentration: Computer science and neuroscience, concurrent master’s in computer science 

When Ayush Noori was 7, his grandmother, Munira Brooks, was diagnosed with progressive supranuclear palsy, a rare neurodegenerative disease that slowly robbed her of the ability to speak, move, or breathe. Assisting in her care and witnessing her long struggle inspired Noori to pursue science and medicine. “My mission is to give people with neurological disease more time with their loved ones,” said Noori.

Noori has championed this mission for nearly a decade. Since the age of 12, working or volunteering in various labs, he has conducted research at the intersection of neuroscience, artificial intelligence, and precision medicine, seeking to develop new AI-enabled diagnostic and treatment options for patients with neurological disorders.

As an undergraduate, Noori has authored 25 peer-reviewed publications — including seven as first author — in scientific journals including CellNature NeuroscienceNature Machine IntelligenceNature AgingAlzheimer’s & Dementia, and NBD, and his work has been featured at more than a dozen international conferences. He has been advised by professors including Marinka Zitnik at Harvard Medical School; George Church at the Wyss Institute for Biologically Inspired Materials; and Sudeshna Das, Alberto Serrano-Pozo, and Bradley T. Hyman in the Department of Neurology at Massachusetts General Hospital. He plans to do graduate study in clinical neurosciences at Oxford next year. 

The recipient of more than a dozen fellowships at Harvard and a Roberts Family Fellow at Harvard Business School, the Goldwater Scholar and Adams House resident is also devoted to teaching and mentorship as co-founder of the Harvard Undergraduate OpenBio Laboratory and as a peer adviser at Harvard College.

“I have an immense debt of gratitude toward Harvard because I’ve studied and trained here since I was a teenager,” he said. “The College, SEAS, MGH, and Harvard Medical School have enabled me to contribute to the global fight against neurological disease and given me hope for a healthier future, for my loved ones, and for the world.”


Laura Wegner

Laura Wegner.

Photo courtesy of Laura Wegner

Laura Wegner

Walsrode, Germany

Concentration: Economics, secondary in computer science 

Laura Wegner, Currier House resident and Germany Rhodes Scholarship recipient, wants to address patients’ fragmented medical records and revolutionize healthcare technology to improve patient outcomes.

It’s a cause driven by personal experience. While in high school, Wegner, formerly a competitive swimmer, had to undergo surgery for a knee injury. Doctors used the “wrong surgical method,” Wegner said, due to not having access to her full medical history, including information about a pre-existing health condition, leaving her unable to continue swimming.

“That was a personal experience where I thought, ‘Wow, parts of my patient data are stored in so many different places, and I wish they were together somehow.’”

To improve experiences for future patients, Wegner co-founded the startup Mii in 2022, a patient healthcare passport that securely stores patient data so patients can bring their medical history from doctor to doctor, around the world. 

Wegner has taken Harvard courses in health economics, privacy and technology, and entrepreneurship, and has worked as a fellow with the Lemann Program on Creativity and Entrepreneurship. Eager for global perspectives, Wegner has studied digital healthcare systems in the U.S., Germany, and Australia, and she is writing her thesis on systems in Estonia and Lithuania.

Looking forward to improving her technical skills at Oxford with the hope of continuing her work in healthcare technology, Wegner says she loves both the creative and technical sides of entrepreneurship.

“It’s just about having an idea and then immediately being able to build a prototype, test it out, and see where it goes. It’s an amazing opportunity to bring any idea to life, and hopefully have it improve people’s lives.” 


What Trump got right

Kellyanne Conway, president-elect’s 2016 campaign manager and former senior adviser, discusses election, what comes next


Nation & World

What Trump got right

Setti Warren and Kellyanne Conway.

Setti Warren and Kellyanne Conway.

Photos by Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

3 min read

Kellyanne Conway, president-elect’s 2016 campaign manager and former senior adviser, discusses recent election, what comes next

The Democrats got it wrong.

It wasn’t threats to national security or democracy, and it wasn’t the U.S. Supreme Court’s undoing of Roe v. Wade. What voters cared most about this election was “safety, affordability, fairness, and education,” said Republican operative Kellyanne Conway during a sometimes testy 90-minute talk at the JFK Jr. Forum about the 2024 election and what to expect from the incoming Trump administration. 

That’s why ads and other messaging about crime, inflation, immigration, student loan forgiveness, and school choice proved so effective in the campaigns of President-elect Donald Trump and several other Republican candidates, she told Setti Warren, director of the Institute of Politics at Harvard Kennedy School. 

Trump won by running up the numbers of voters already predisposed to vote for him and “peeling off” some support among “core Democratic” Party constituencies, including African Americans, Hispanic Americans, union households, Jewish, and younger voters, improving on his own 2016 and 2020 numbers, said Conway, who managed the final months of Trump’s 2016 campaign and served as an adviser during his first term.

Conway said she thinks Democrats underestimated how motivating the issue of K-12 education was to many across the political spectrum, particularly women, who did not support Harris as robustly as they had Presidents Joe Biden and Barack Obama.

Trump was seen as “authentic” and a proven commodity who had already done the job and ran a “joyful” and “forward-looking” campaign, she said, pointing to Trump’s visit to a McDonald’s franchise, rallies at concert venues, and his garbage truck ride. 

Kellyanne Conway.

Conway credited the campaign’s embrace of “new, new media” like TikTok, podcasts, and social media influencers, as a strategic move that paid real dividends in the final weeks reaching young men and low propensity voters. Also important was the campaign’s under-reported effort to educate disengaged voters about the many ways they could cast a ballot before Election Day, which also helped the former president prevail. 

Over the past two weeks, Trump has announced more than two dozen nominees for White House and Cabinet positions, primarily top campaign staffers and high-profile business executives.

“What they all have in common is they know him; he knows them; and they are fluent in the America First agenda, meaning: This is what we’ve been elected to do,” Conway said. “So he’s got people who are willing to work with alacrity and energy to get that agenda through.”

At times, Conway flashed the quick and cutting fast-talk that has made her a polarizing figure on the left, sparring with student questioners.

She called for students to try to bring their friends who suffer from “Trump derangement syndrome” back to their senses.

“You all know someone afflicted by it. … It wrecks the nervous system. It addles the brain. There is no vaccine, cure, or therapeutic, but you all have a role to play in helping people at least unwind a little bit from it” by not canceling those who have a different point of view. 

“I certainly hope that the new government that’s forming can rely upon, if not all of you right away, most of you along the way, to help in any way, shape, or form that you possibly can,” she said.


Use of new diet drugs likely to mushroom

Study estimates over half of Americans eligible to take them based on conditions, underscoring need to ensure equity of access.


Two packages of 5 dosing pens each of semiglutin .
Health

Use of new diet drugs likely to mushroom

Study estimates over half of Americans eligible to take them based on diagoses, underscoring need to ensure equity of access.

4 min read

In a new analysis of national data, an estimated 137 million U.S. adults, more than half of the adult population, would qualify for the anti-obesity drug semagludtide.

“These staggering numbers mean that we are likely to see large increases in spending on semaglutide and related medications in years to come,” said corresponding author Dhruv S. Kazi, associate director of the Richard A. and Susan F. Smith Center for Outcomes Research at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. “Ensuring equitable access to these effective but high-cost medications, as well as supporting individuals so that they can stay on the therapy long-term, should be a priority for our clinicians and policymakers.”

The findings, which were presented at the American Heart Association Scientific Sessions and simultaneously published in JAMA Cardiology, underscore the need to increase equitable access to this new class of pharmaceuticals.

Semaglutide belongs to a class of drugs known as GLP-1 receptor agonists. It is currently approved to manage diabetes, treat overweight or obesity, and of recurrent cardiovascular disease. About 15 million adults take semaglutide, which stimulates the pancreas to produce insulin and reduces the hunger hormone ghrelin, decreasing the appetite and slowing down the rate of stomach emptying. As a result, semaglutide helps lower blood sugar levels and promotes weight loss.

Semaglutide is found to improve symptoms in sleep apnea and in some types of heart failure, and slows the progression of chronic kidney disease.

In 2023, it was the top-selling drug in the U.S. in terms of total pharmaceutical spending. But rapidly emerging data about its effectiveness for other health conditions is likely to further expand its use in future years. For instance, semaglutide is found to improve symptoms in sleep apnea and in some types of heart failure, and slows the progression of chronic kidney disease. Semaglutide and others in its class are currently being evaluated for treatment of liver and kidney diseases, substance use disorders, and dementia.

Ivy Shi, who is a resident in internal medicine at BIDMC, worked with Kazi to produce the analysis. They used five years’ worth of recent data from the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, a long-running survey of the U.S. population run by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, to identify U.S. adults aged 18 years or older who would be eligible for semaglutide treatment based on currently approved indications. They analyzed information about 25,531 survey participants gathered through in-person interviews, physical examinations, and laboratory testing.

They found that of the 136.8 million U.S. adults who qualified for semaglutide, 35 million would administer it for diabetes management, 129.2 million for weight loss, and 8.9 million for secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease. The semaglutide-eligible population includes 26.8 million adults covered by Medicare, 13.8 million covered by Medicaid, and 61.1 million covered by commercial insurance.

“The large number of U.S. adults eligible for semaglutide highlights its potential transformative impact on population health,” said Shi. “Prior studies have shown that more than half of the individuals who have taken these medications state the therapy was difficult to afford. Interventions to reduce economic barriers to access are urgently needed.”

Co-authors: Ivy Shi, Robert W. Yeh, Jennifer E. Ho, and Issa Dahabreh of BIDMC; and Sadiya S. Khan of Feinberg School of Medicine, Northwestern University.

Disclosures: Sadiya S. Khan reported grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute outside the submitted work. Jennifer E. Ho reported grants from the National Institutes of Health during the conduct of the study. Issa Dahabreh reported a contract with the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute and grants from the National Institutes of Health during the conduct of the study. Kazi reported grants from the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, American Heart Institute, Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute, and Institute for Clinical and Economic Research outside the submitted work. No other disclosures were reported.

Funding/support: Dahabreh is supported by grants from the National Library of Medicine (R01 LM013616), the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (R01 HL136708), and the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute (ME-2021C2-22365).


He didn’t come all this way to lose to Yale

Dream job and a winning season for Aurich, but one big test remains: The Game.


Campus & Community

He didn’t come all this way to lose to Yale

Andrew Aurich (pictured) answers questions from the media. Photos

Harvard coach Andrew Aurich answers questions from the media.

Niles Singer/Harvard Staff Photographer

5 min read

Dream job and a winning season for Aurich, but one big test remains: The Game.

For many Crimson football fans, devotion can be measured by consecutive years of attendance at the Harvard-Yale game. But Saturday’s showdown will be a first for the man who now leads their beloved program.

“All the time I was playing at Princeton, and coaching at Princeton, I was kind of jealous of Harvard-Yale,” said Andrew Aurich, Thomas Stephenson Family Head Coach for Harvard Football. “I’m really excited to experience it.”

The first-time head coach, who came to Harvard from Rutgers University, has led the Crimson to an impressive 8-1 record. The team clinched at least a share of the Ivy League title with a dramatic win over the University of Pennsylvania last weekend, making Aurich the first head football coach in Harvard history to win a league title in his first season.

We caught up with Aurich to learn more about preparations for one of the biggest dates on the Crimson calendar. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.


The Crimson are having a great season under your leadership. To what do you attribute your early success?  

Former head coach Tim Murphy played a big part in what’s happening this year. When I got here, it was very clear these players were already training to win a championship. They are very tough mentally. We’ve had some close games where our ability to focus at the end, and really execute, has allowed us to win.

Tell me about your leadership style.

One of the core parts of our culture is 100 percent honesty; the players are always going to get 100 percent honesty from me. Whether or not they like what they hear, they should know it’s coming from a good place. I expect the same from them. If there’s a better way to do something, I want to find a way to do that.

Andrew Aurich on sidelines during Stetson game.

Aurich on the sidelines during the Harvard-Stetson game in September.

Credit: Harvard Athletics

What changes have you brought to the program?

My plan all along was to get an Ivy League head coaching job. But my experiences outside the league helped me see there were opportunities to help these young men become better players and a better team overall. If you ask them, they’ll say there’s a little more emphasis on sports science, whether it’s in the weight room or the emphasis we’re putting on nutrition, hydration, and sleep.

You said something interesting just now — that you always wanted to be a head coach in the Ivy League. Say more about that.

I knew I wanted to get into coaching when I was playing at Princeton. My dad had been my high school football coach, so I went back to St. Paul, Minnesota, and coached with him for a year and confirmed that I loved it. I ended up at a small Division 3 school in Pennsylvania for two years, and then I got the opportunity to go to Rutgers for my first stint as a defensive assistant.

From there I got the running backs coaching job at Princeton. My experience with the student-athletes there was so enjoyable. They’re just so driven and fun to be around. The next year I went to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers with my former boss at Rutgers, coach Greg Schiano. But as soon I got to the NFL, I immediately thought: “The Ivy League is where it’s at, I’ve got to do everything I can to become an Ivy League head football coach.”

What happened next?

I ended up back at Princeton. I was there for a long time, but saw that I needed something more than just Ivy League experience. When coach Schiano got the head coaching job at Rutgers again, I knew that working for him would help prepare me for success.

Landing the top job at Harvard must have felt like a dream fulfilled.

I was on the road recruiting with coach Schiano as the whole hiring process was underway. He doesn’t know the Ivy League all that well, so he was trying to get some perspective. “What is it like?” he wanted to know. I told him: “Coach, this is like being at Ohio State or [University of] Michigan in the Big Ten.” The entire time I was at Princeton — whether I was a player or a coach — I saw Harvard as top dog in the Ivy League.

How are you preparing for Yale?

Well, there’s definitely a different kind of energy right now. My job is to make sure our players are going about their business the same way they have been for the last nine weeks. This game means a lot to a lot of people. Even the level of the interest from the outside, including the number of media requests, is completely different from previous weeks. But ultimately, I can’t get caught up in it. Because if I am, I know the players are.

The Crimson fell to the Bulldogs in 2022 and ’23, but you’re the favorite this year. What do you hope to see on the field Saturday?

I want to see a team that is protecting the football on offense, that is taking the ball away in defense. I want to see a team that is executing 11 guys every play. I want to see a team that’s on the attack every single play. That’s how we define ourselves as a football program.

Will you get to participate in any of the fun stuff this weekend?

Hopefully the fun stuff I’ll be doing is celebrating a win.


Ketanji Brown Jackson? Present!

Supreme Court justice revisits Michael Sandel’s class, which left her with lessons that lasted long beyond her time in it as first-year


Campus & Community

Ketanji Brown Jackson? Present!

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson (left) speaks with Michael J. Sandel and Massachusetts Supreme Court Judge Margaret Marshall d

Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson (left) with Michael Sandel and Margaret Marshall, former chief justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts.

Photo by Grace DuVal

3 min read

Supreme Court justice revisits Michael Sandel’s class, which left her with lessons that lasted long beyond her time in it as first-year

In a passage from “Lovely One,” Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson ’92, J.D. ’96, is a Harvard College first-year drawing a smiley face in her notes for the course “Justice.”

“I want to laugh at the way my mind spins as I listen to the opinions being expressed,” she writes in a College essay excerpted in the new memoir. “I want to know the answers. I glimpse that there are no answers. Yet to wonder is not enough. We must never stop asking the questions.”

On Tuesday, Jackson was met by 800-plus smiles — and a standing ovation — as she returned to visit a course that proved influential in her life. Welcoming her at Sanders Theatre was Michael J. Sandel, the Anne T. and Robert M. Bass Professor of Government, who has taught “Justice” since 1980. Jackson credits Sandel’s Gen Ed offering with building her confidence while instilling a passion for healthy debate.

“I felt myself expanding and growing more visible to myself as I engaged the great philosophical conundrums,” she writes in the book. “The animated discussions about open-ended ethical dilemmas made me come completely alive.”

Seated with Jackson under the bright stage lights, Sandel invited students to engage with the issue of affirmative action while drawing on insights from influential philosophers, ancient and modern. Primary readings this semester include works from Aristotle, Immanuel Kant, and John Rawls. But the syllabus also features the 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision rejecting affirmative-action policies at Harvard College and the University of North Carolina.

Some students lined up to share responses to Jackson’s dissent in the UNC case. (She recused herself in the case of Harvard, having served on its Board of Overseers.) Jackson may have been a quiet participant in “Justice” three decades ago, as she notes in the book. But she was much less so on her return to the two-hour lecture as she laid out her legal and moral reasoning on affirmative action. The whole exchange was off the record.

Taking the stage to address the class for the final 45 minutes of the session was Margaret Marshall, Ed.M. ’69, former chief justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts. Sandel assigned students to read her 2003 opinion in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, which established the right to same-sex marriage for the first time in U.S. history. Sandel said that Marshall’s opinion is a rare piece of legal writing with the resonance of prayer. It has found second life as a popular reading at weddings nationwide.


Harvard, MIT, Mass General form renewable energy collaboration

Group will include higher education, healthcare, and cultural institutions, seek to leverage buying power to advance cost-effective, green production projects


Campus & Community

Harvard, MIT, Mass General form renewable energy collaboration

Group will include higher education, healthcare, and cultural institutions, seek to leverage buying power to advance cost-effective projects

4 min read
The Big Elm Solar Project located in Bell County, Texas, came online in 2024.

The Big Elm Solar Project located in Bell County, Texas, came online this year.

Credit: Apex Energy

Harvard announced on Wednesday the formation of the Consortium for Climate Solutions, a first-of-its-kind renewable energy collaboration of higher education, healthcare, and cultural institutions, as well as state and local government entities, led by Harvard, Mass General Brigham (MGB), and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). 

The consortium will leverage its members’ collective purchasing power to overcome market conditions that serve as barriers to development of projects that advance cost-effective renewable energy and allow for larger-scale investment.

“With these new utility-scale renewable electricity projects, Harvard will purchase the equivalent of 100 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, fulfilling a key component of our approach to meet our goal to be fossil fuel-neutral by 2026.”

Heather Henriksen.
Heather Henriksen, chief sustainability officer

“Investing in new, large-scale renewables marks a significant step forward for Harvard in its commitment to a clean energy future,” said Meredith Weenick, executive vice president. “By founding the consortium with MIT and MGB, we are not only catalyzing the transition to a cleaner grid but also demonstrating a collaboration model that will enable a variety of nonprofit organizations and municipalities to work together to address the urgent challenges of climate change.”

The consortium recently finalized negotiations that will result in the development of 408 megawatts of new renewable energy through two large-scale, utility-grade projects — the Big Elm Solar in Bell County, Texas, and the Bowman Wind Project in Bowman County, North Dakota. The 200-megawatt Big Elm Solar project came online earlier this year, and the 208-megawatt Bowman Wind project is expected to come online in 2026. Collectively these projects will generate clean power equal to the electricity use of 130,000 U.S. homes annually.

“With these new utility-scale renewable electricity projects, Harvard will purchase the equivalent of 100 percent of its electricity from renewable sources, fulfilling a key component of our approach to meet our goal to be fossil fuel-neutral by 2026, while we simultaneously work on the longer-term effort to decarbonize our historic and urban campus,” explained Heather Henriksen, Harvard’s chief sustainability officer. 

Achieving fossil-fuel neutrality by 2026 is a bridging strategy to mitigate the negative impact of fossil fuels on emission levels and air pollution while the University develops longer-term technology and infrastructure changes to eliminate its use of fossil fuels by 2050. In addition to purchasing electricity from renewable sources, the University looks to seek greater energy efficiency and heat recovery on campus, replace fossil-fuel equipment at the end of life, increase its electric vehicle fleet, and find other reductions of fossil-fuel use.

“There is plenty of scientific evidence that fossil fuels are negatively impacting health, community stability, and ecosystems around the world. As Harvard continues on its path to become a fossil fuel-free campus, it is critical that the University not only conduct research on how to drive down global emissions and bolster adaptation, but to use our purchasing power to help produce cost-effective renewable energy solutions at scale,” said Mike Toffel, the Senator John Heinz Professor of Environmental Management at Harvard Business School, faculty chair of the Business and Environment Initiative at HBS, and co-chair of the Presidential Committee on Sustainability. “The consortium is an excellent example of engaging with the renewable electricity markets to expand their scale and impact.” 

The consortium founding members, Harvard, MGB, and MIT, sought opportunities to collaborate with smaller nonprofits and municipalities. This resulted in the partnership with PowerOptions, a nonprofit energy-buying organization, enabling the city of Cambridge, Beth Israel Lahey, Boston Children’s Hospital, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Tufts University, the Mass. Convention Center Authority, the Museum of Fine Arts, and WGBH to join under the PowerOptions umbrella. The consortium is providing PowerOptions members with access to affordable, large-scale renewable energy purchases that would typically be out of reach for individual buyers. 

The creation of the consortium, supported by Harvard’s leadership, was led by the Office for Sustainability working with faculty and other key stakeholders. The projects chosen for investment align with the recommendations and criteria set forth by the Fossil Fuel-Neutral by 2026 Subcommittee of the University’s Presidential Committee on Sustainability. The consortium vetted more than 100 potential projects, ultimately choosing the Big Elm Solar and Bowman Wind projects from developer Apex Clean Energy.

Locally, the consortium’s power-purchase agreements with the Big Elm and Bowman projects will enable its members to accelerate progress toward their individual sustainability goals consistent with local emissions-reduction regulatory targets, while simultaneously reducing fossil fuel emissions at a national scale. 

“The locations and scale of each project, in two of the most carbon-intensive electrical grid regions in the United States, mean that the potential positive impact is significant, creating a more robust and cleaner grid,” explained Henriksen.


Rapid relief for the severely depressed? There’s a catch.

Ketamine carries risks, say researchers. Yet for some patients, it’s ‘the only thing that works.’


Health

Rapid relief for the severely depressed? There’s a catch.

woman sitting on bed alone
6 min read

Ketamine carries risks, say researchers. Yet for some patients, it’s ‘the only thing that works.’ 

At the Ketamine Clinic for Depression at Massachusetts General Hospital, patients make their way each day to receive intravenous infusions of the powerful anesthetic that has become an alternative therapy for treatment-resistant depression. 

Many of the clinic’s patients have not been helped by traditional treatments, including psychological counseling, antidepressant medication, transcranial magnetic stimulation, and electroconvulsive therapy. With its rapid antidepressant effects, ketamine is sometimes the only option that provides relief, said clinic founder and director Cristina Cusin, who has been researching depression and mood disorders for the past 25 years.  

“We don’t have good weapons to treat some severe forms of depression, just like we don’t have treatments for advanced-stage cancer,” said Cusin, who is also an associate professor in psychiatry at Harvard Medical School. “We’re always looking for the next thing so that we can continue to offer hope to patients who don’t respond to standard treatments.”

In 2000, after a study reported that small doses of IV ketamine rapidly reversed symptoms of depression while standard antidepressants often took several weeks to have an effect, ketamine became the next new thing. In 2019, based on years of research, the FDA approved a nasal spray medication, derived from ketamine, to be administered under medical supervision.

Depression is a mental health disorder characterized by feelings of sadness and hopelessness, that affects 18 percent of Americans. One-third of those diagnosed with depression don’t respond to standard treatments, with acute consequences to their personal and professional lives. The stigma associated with depression makes it harder for people to seek treatment, said Cusin. 

“There are some forms of depression that have a strong biological component; there are neurocircuits in the brain that are not functioning right. In many cases, it’s not for lack of trying.” 

Cristina Cusin

“In our society, if you suffer from depression, you may be told to ‘try harder,’ ‘stop complaining,’ ‘pick yourself up by your bootstraps,’ and so on,” Cusin said. “But there are some forms of depression that have a strong biological component; there are neurocircuits in the brain that are not functioning right. In many cases, it’s not for lack of trying.” 

Patients follow a strict protocol to be admitted to the MGH Ketamine Clinic; not only do they have to be referred by their primary prescribers, but also prior treatments for depression must have failed. Ketamine therapy is integrated with other treatments and is done in the clinic under medical supervision and in coordination with patients’ primary medical teams. The clinic doesn’t admit self-referred patients or those with active substance use disorders or a history of psychosis. Ketamine produces hallucinogenic effects and dissociation, which can exacerbate psychotic symptoms. 

Other risks associated with ketamine are the possibility of developing addiction and a host of medical problems, but for patients who experience rapid relief from their symptoms of depression after treatment, ketamine is a game-changer, said Cusin. “Our patients have failed other treatments, so they don’t have a lot of other options,” she said. “If this is the only thing that works, they keep coming.” 

Scientists continue researching ketamine’s antidepressant effects on treatment-resistant depression. A recent clinical trial found that ketamine was as effective for non-psychotic treatment-resistant depression as electroconvulsive therapy (ECT), which has long been the gold standard for hard-to-treat depression.

Conducted by Amit Anand, professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School, the study found that 55 percent of those receiving ketamine and 41 percent of those receiving ECT had at least a 50 percent improvement in their self-reported depression symptoms. Anand co-authored the pivotal 2000 study that revealed the rapid antidepressant effects of ketamine.

Encouraged by his recent study’s results, Anand is conducting a follow-up clinical trial comparing ketamine and ECT treatments among patients with suicidal depression. If ketamine can affect suicidal thoughts, it could be lifesaving. “What we’re trying to see is that if ketamine can cause a very rapid reversal of the troubling kind of depression leading to suicidality,” he said. “People are suffering, and even if it is for a short time, it is beneficial to provide a rapid change.”

“What we’re trying to see is that if ketamine can cause a very rapid reversal of the troubling kind of depression leading to suicidality.”

Amit Anand

Even though doctors and researchers are hopeful regarding the promise of ketamine, there is growing concern about the proliferation of private ketamine clinics, which began to crop up around the country after restrictions on telemedicine relaxed during the pandemic. These clinics offer IV ketamine infusions, with prices ranging from $600 to $800 per infusion. 

Most ketamine private clinics operate in a gray zone, with almost no oversight, and function as for-profit businesses, said Peter Grinspoon, a primary care physician, educator, and cannabis specialist at MGH. 

“The end result is that now our population has broad access to ketamine, and it’s a little bit of an uncontrolled experiment,” said Grinspoon. “Whether it’s going to alleviate many people’s depression or whether it’s going to get a lot of people addicted to ketamine is going to be an open question. We don’t know how much it is going to help or harm things.”

Ketamine is not nearly as addictive as alcohol or opioids, but its use as a recreational drug poses serious risks. Actor Matthew Perry died last year of “acute effects of ketamine.” His autopsy also found opioids in his blood, but the level of ketamine found was equivalent to the amount that would be used during general anesthesia. 

The other troubling issue for Grinspoon is affordability. “I work as a primary care doctor in an inner-city clinic,” he said. “None of my patients can afford six $800 injections. … The last thing we need is for ketamine to be another treatment for just the well to-do. … This has got to be affordable.”

At the MGH clinic, patients receive low doses of ketamine in long intervals and have mixed experiences. While some report feeling relaxed, others find it unpleasant, but most said their symptoms of depression improve and don’t interfere with day-to-day functioning. Still, 

Cusin warns that ketamine should not be a first-option treatment for depression. 

“If someone is depressed or suicidal, there are alternatives out there,” said Cusin. “There are 50, 80 different treatments to consider. It’s rare that somebody has tried everything. Usually, there are entire classes of medications or treatments that have not been considered. There is always hope.”


Culture Lab Innovation Fund grants awarded to 12 projects

Grant recipients foster a culture of innovation and belonging on Harvard campus


Campus & Community

Culture Lab Innovation Fund grants awarded to 12 projects

Grant recipients foster a culture of innovation and belonging on Harvard campus

6 min read
The Lighting for Diverse Skin Tones project holding an in-person lighting master class for Harvard media professionals.

The Lighting for Diverse Skin Tones project holding an in-person lighting master class for Harvard media professionals.

Photo by Julia King

Twelve projects have recently been awarded grants from the Harvard Culture Lab Innovation Fund (HCLIF) for the 2024–2025 cycle. Harvard students, faculty, staff, postdoctoral researchers, and fellows submitted grant proposals for projects aimed at fostering an inclusive environment at the University. Each project aligns with HCLIF’s mission to “encourage experimentation, build a culture of inclusion, and grow a network of equity, diversity, inclusion, and belonging innovators at Harvard,” while also supporting the University’s goal of achieving inclusive excellence. Funded by the Office of the President and administered by the Office for Equity, Diversity, Inclusion, and Belonging, these grants range from $5,000 to $15,000.

“Harvard is committed to continuing its investment in innovative ideas that promote a campus culture of inclusion and belonging,” said Sherri Charleston, chief diversity and inclusion officer. “These grassroots projects unite community members at all levels of the University — researchers, students, faculty, postdocs, and staff — who identify pressing campus needs and apply their expertise to develop solutions. From a series exploring faith and justice to a project creating inclusive medical illustrations, the HCLIF projects are transforming ideas into action and making a significant impact.”

“From a series exploring faith and justice to a project creating inclusive medical illustrations, the HCLIF projects are transforming ideas into action and making a significant impact.”

Sherri Charleston
Sherri Charleston, chief diversity and inclusion officer
 

This year’s project teams showcase cross-University collaboration, with members representing Schools and units from across Harvard.

The awardees include the Lighting for Diverse Skin Tones project, a second-year grant recipient. It is a University-wide training resource that educates video producers and media professionals at Harvard on how to create lighting that captures a variety of skin tones effectively in photography, especially skin tones previously overlooked in photography and film training. With additional funding, they will work to identify a host site for the project and complete editing of previously recorded videos. “This project started with the intention of honing media producers’ skills in the craft of inclusive cinema lighting, but we ended by finding the time and space to really see people and understand how they want to be represented,” said Julia King, creative video producer at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, and Jacob Beizer, senior digital content producer and strategist at the Harvard Kennedy School in a statement. “We are excited to provide this resource to the entire Harvard community.”

The Inclusive Anatomical Images project stems from collaborations between Harvard Medical School, Harvard Art Museums, and the University of Global Health Equity based in Rwanda. The project seeks to ensure diverse patients have a higher chance of being better served and aims to improve patient outcomes by creating more inclusive educational medical literature. It creates materials reflecting a diversity of bodies — including various sizes, ancestries, genders, and skin tones — to better serve a wide diversity of patients. With this year’s funding, the team will expand their reach by making their resources more accessible to institutions, researchers, and health professionals beyond Harvard, while expanding their team to meet the demand for their expertise and images. Martha Ellen Katz, a faculty member of the Harvard Medical School, said, “Our project has the potential to validate the life experience of historically excluded patients, physicians, dentists, and student learners at HMS, and curricula worldwide. Our equitable work culture, which strives to be as non-hierarchical as possible, also encourages student leadership and acknowledges the essential contributions of all team members, collaborators, and supporters.”

The Connecting Community Through Food project celebrates Harvard’s student body through food. By collaborating with Harvard College students, student organizations, and employees, the Harvard University Dining Services team aims to develop recipes and menus authored by Harvard undergraduates from a diversity of backgrounds. These meals will be served more regularly in dining halls. Smitha Haneef, executive director of the Harvard University Dining Services, explained, “We want students to experience the dining halls as welcoming, comforting places, hopefully like their home kitchens. For this to happen, the menus must feel like home. This project helps us realize that vision for more community members.”

Additional 2024 HCLIF Recipients

  • Community Project on Faith and Justice cultivates inclusivity and engagement centered on faith by hosting speaker series and community events where affiliates can explore the influence of faith in their lives.
  • Disability Awareness Series aims to increase awareness about the resources available for, and challenges faced by, those with disability and accessibility needs at Harvard. It engages Harvard College students, staff, researchers, and faculty through an awareness campaign and series of events.
  • Disability in Health Professions Mentorship Program cultivates a supportive community for current and future health professionals living with disabilities and chronic illness, fostering a greater sense of belonging at Harvard.
  • Emerging Scientists Program connects high school students from Cambridge and Boston with Harvard graduate students, postdoctoral researchers, and staff, providing meaningful and accessible life sciences research experiences.
  • Harvard Career Capsule empowers graduate students by providing professional attire and equipment to support their career development.
  • Harvard University Peer Coaching Initiative aims to reduce loneliness and enhance interpersonal skills by pairing Harvard students and researchers. Participants engage in weekly sessions over the course of a semester to practice effective listening with one another.
  • Justice-Impacted Inclusion seeks to make Harvard more inclusive of formerly incarcerated people and others impacted by the justice system. The initiative consults with formerly incarcerated policy experts and creates resources, such as a guide on inclusive language and practices.
  • LifeSaveHer develops trainings to address misconceptions regarding performing CPR on women, including modifying male CPR mannequins to represent female bodies, ultimately aiming to reduce cardiac arrest survival disparities for women.
  • Trans+ Community Celebration at Harvard seeks to uplift the trans+ community by creating inclusive spaces within the University.

Applications for the 2025-2026 funding term of Harvard Culture Lab Innovation Fund grants are now open to Harvard students, faculty, staff, postdoctoral researchers, and academic personnel. Harvard community members interested in participating as judges for the 2025-2026 HCLIF grant applications can now sign up.