Sina Azodi (Political Science) authored the articles “How a US–Iran Clash Could Spiral Out of Control” for The National Interest and “History tells us coercion through airpower alone won’t work” for Responsible Statecraft.
Kara Braciale (Studio Arts) was featured in the National Gallery of Art article “Create with Us: How Drawing Can Teach You to See Your Belongings in a New Light.”
Susan Dudley (TSPPPA) wrote the article “Valuing the Benefits of Reducing Fine Particles” for The Regulatory Review.
Alexander Dumbadze (Art History) authored the book Jack Goldstein: All Day Night Sky (University of Chicago Press, 2026).
Maria Frawley (English) wrote the book Jane Austen in 50 Words (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2025), which was recently featured in Orellfüssli magazine.
Alexa Alice Joubin (English) received a $6,136 grant from the Institute for Humane Studies to develop open-source and open-access AI for liberal arts higher education.
First-year student Riley Martin (Psychological and Brain Sciences, Political Science) was interviewed for the Folger Shakespeare Library blog about her experiences visiting the library in Rachel Pollack’s (Writing) course, Art in the Age of Shakespeare.
Harris Mylonas (Political Science) co-authored “Eliminationist Politics: An Analytical Framework” and co-edited “The Logics of Eliminationist Politics” for the Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies.
Ahmed Rostrom, PhD ’15, (Economics) was named Egypt’s minister of planning and economic development.
Cheryl W. Thompson (SMPA) spoke at the MLK Library in Washington, D.C., and the New England Air Museum on her book Forgotten Souls: The Search For The Lost Tuskegee Airmen (Dafina, 2026).
Mark Wolfe (TSPPPA) authored the article “Why US household energy bills are soaring – and how to fix it” for The Guardian.