Faculty Available to Speak on 2016 Olympic Games
Georgetown faculty experts examine the issues and dynamics associated with the 2016 Summer Games in Brazil. Read More
Georgetown faculty experts examine the issues and dynamics associated with the 2016 Summer Games in Brazil. Read More
Georgetown professors Soyica Diggs Colbert and Robert Patterson hope their new book will spark conversations about how the American legacy of slavery informs a present in which African-Americans experience ongoing and increasing racial inequity and violence. Read More
Hans Noel, an associate professor of government and co-author of The Party Decides, talks about the 2016 election and the future of American politics. Read More
Claire Charamnac (SFS’11) interviews participants in Women LEAD, the first and only leadership development organization for young women in Nepal, that she created with Claire Naylor (SFS’11). Read More
Rev. Patrick DesBois, who recently accepted a full-time appointment at Georgetown's Center for Jewish Civilization, gives an update on the Holocaust by Bullets project, which looks for evidence of unmarked mass graves left behind by the Nazis. Read More
A new book by McDonough School of Business professor Robert J. Bies analyzes the impact of abusive leadership in the workplace. Read More
Caroline Hughes (C'18) joins School of Nursing & Health Studies professor Bette Jacobs on a trip to Mozambique to work with a Catholic university and a women's advocacy organization. Read More
Nina Jankowicz (G’13) receives a Fulbright grant to work for the Ukrainian government as a special adviser on strategic communications. Read More
Peggy Compton, a professor at the School of Nursing & Health Studies (NHS) is conducting research that could help fight the American opioid addiction epidemic recently proclaimed by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Read More
Miguel CuUnjieng (MBA’15) is named one of “30 Under 30” to watch in sustainable business by GreenBiz Group, a media and events company in corporate sustainability. Read More