Skip to main content

News

Full listing

The nine undergrads will be arriving on campus through December, thanks to robust international and cross-campus collaborations. Cornell has pledged support until they graduate.

Source

In this op-ed, Kaushik Basu, professor of economics, and Nicole Hassoun, a former Einaudi Center visiting scholar, argue that global health leaders must adopt a treaty on pandemic preparedness and response and that it must prioritize new incentives for pharmaceutical companies and equity between nations.

Source

Laidlaw scholars at Cornell are diving into a world of research. Over the first summer of the program, 24 Cornellians selected for the prestigious international program completed research projects on topics ranging from migration and big data to entomology, engineering communications, and animal science.

Source

Gustavo Flores-Macias, associate vice provost for international affairs, writes this opinion piece arguing that inflation levels are likely to be most consequential for the poor, women and underrepresented minorities.

Source

This piece on the challenges the pandemic posed for Chinese students in the U.S. notes that Cornell, NYU and Barnard College arranged for their students to attend classes in China as they were unable to return to campus.

Source

Intensive, annual library programs empower students, strengthening their core research skills while providing advanced tools and methods for scholarship. These immersion programs are offered for graduate students in a range of disciplines and can support international research.

Source

The most widely spoken Indigenous language in the Americas is back this fall. Meet Chango—and celebrate #IEW2021 with Einaudi, Nov. 15–19!

Source

Sara Baaser tells the story of her return to Cornell, amid the end of the war and the fall of Kabul to the Taliban. 

Source

In this piece, Professor Ian Kysel of the Law School to discuss asylum seeking and the struggles of asylum seekers in the US immigration system. 

Source

"Employers are having to wait a long time to get their petitions approved, and renewals are not being processed in a timely manner,” says Stephen Yale-Loehr, professor of law. “It’s going to take a long time for them to work through the backlog.”

Source