Marina N. Bolotnikova

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The Voter-Fraud Disinformation Campaign

A White House-led effort to recast public discourse 

Admissions Lawsuit, Round Two

Appellate arguments are heard in a closely watched admissions case. 

“Find Your Way to Heal This World”

A virtual Convocation for the College class of 2024

CARES Act watchdog Bharat Ramamurti ’03

Bharat Ramamurti ’03 oversees CARES Act spending—and pursues corporate reform.

Could COVID-19 Transform U.S. Education?

A conversation on the crisis and its outcomes with the Graduate School of Education’s Paul Reville 

Why Do We Still Have the Electoral College?

Historian Alexander Keyssar on why the unpopular institution has prevailed 

College Yield Drops 3 Percent Since COVID-19

Some students have deferred their enrollment to next year. 

Juneteenth Is Now a University Holiday

The holiday “offers a moment to acknowledge and celebrate the promise of a new beginning,” University president Larry Bacow wrote. 

Harvard Will Guarantee Staff Pay and Benefits Past June 28

“[W]e will not be pursuing any furloughs or layoffs of our employees at this time,” executive vice president Katie Lapp wrote in an email. 

Harvard Portrait: Melissa Dell

“In the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, people in academic institutions like Harvard predominantly studied the U.S. and Europe,” says the development economist.

Harvard “net-zero” climate-change policy

The University adopts a new goal for managing the endowment.

“Fear and Anger are the Essential Ingredients of Injustice”

At Harvard Law School, Bryan Stevenson on getting proximate to the powerless