Welcome Back with ODI
Join the Office of Diversity and Inclusion in our annual Welcome Back event! You will be able to meet the office staff, learn about what we do and how we […]
Join the Office of Diversity and Inclusion in our annual Welcome Back event! You will be able to meet the office staff, learn about what we do and how we […]
A woman’s magical, multi-generational, healing journey from the Armenian Genocide to the Syrian war in the tradition of Hakawati storytelling.
This talk launches a Belonging Talks series on the role of food and cooking in mobile homemaking and for sustainable societies.
A Clark Faculty Series Event Presented by Elizabeth Blake, PhD Assistant Professor of English Clark University Forbidden fruit has long been a convenient metaphor for illicit knowledge and sexuality, a […]
This lecture and Q&A will feature Demita Frazier, a Black feminist, writer, teacher, and social justice activist, who will offer reflections on the history and future of Black Feminisms.
This two-day event will include musical performances and critical discussion on the important work that Ts’msyen Indigenous communities are doing around culture and rematriation.
Clark’s critical discussion on the important work that Ts’msyen Indigenous communities are doing around culture and rematriation continues with a lecture by Robin Gray of the University of Toronto Mississauga.
With the understanding that the election may still be undecided, we will gather the day after for a conversation about the results.
This presentation explores the transformative journey of an Indigenous community in the Amazon Rainforest of Ecuador as they shift from an extractivist way of life to becoming restorers of their ecosystems.
A live cooking demonstration with Chef Panos Karafoulidis from Thessaloniki, Greece, where Clark students participated in the “Food, Migration, and Belonging in Thessaloniki” summer study abroad program.
The second “Songs of Peace” event will feature performers of varying religious and cultural backgrounds together as they showcase their renditions of how peace and reconciliation can be translated through song, words, and dance.
Please join the Center for Gender, Race and Area Studies and co-sponsor Asian Studies Program for an exceptional lecture about China’s power abroad presented by political scientist Diana Fu.
Come study at a small research university with a strong liberal arts core.
Still curious? Request more information.