Clark News and Media Relations
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2017 Fiske Guide cites Clark University’s LEEP model, caring community, global outlook
“The Fiske Guide to Colleges,” revised and updated for 2017, again includes Clark University in its annual “selective, subjective, and systematic look at three-hundred-plus colleges and universities in the United States, Canada, and the U.K.” The guide covers a broad range of topics, including academic quality, student body, social life, financial aid, campus setting, housing, food, and…
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Clark undergrads receive funding for summer internships at Facing History and Ourselves
Spencer Cronin ’18 and Hannah King ’19 are spending the summer interning for Facing History and Ourselves in Brookline, continuing their studies and conducting research with the help of stipends they received from Clark’s Holocaust and Genocide Studies Program. Cronin, a history major, is developing programs of Holocaust and genocide studies education for secondary schools across the country while at…
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The Christian Science Monitor: ‘The brewing liberal labor revolution’
The growing effort toward raising the minimum wage in the United States to $15 an hour — which has already happened in several locations — is leading to an examination of labor laws that date back nearly a century, according to a Christian Science Monitor article. Drawing upon the social contract established by those labor laws, Clark University’s Gary N. Chaison,…
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UMassMedNow: ‘Summer Enrichment Program leads diverse students on path to medical school’
UMassMedNow, the online publication of the University of Massachusetts Medical School, highlighted the members of its 2016 Summer Enrichment Program, including Clark University’s Iva Hoxha ’17. Hoxha, who came to the United States from Albania with her family when she was 15, took part in the program, which gives aspiring medical students from economically disadvantaged homes and backgrounds underrepresented…
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Worcester Telegram & Gazette: ‘In Worcester-area immigrant communities, disappointment over Supreme Court decision’
The Worcester Telegram & Gazette reported on local reaction to the Supreme Court’s rejection of the Deferred Action for Parents of Americans (DAPA) and Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) programs. Clark University political science Professor Paul Posner weighed in on what the vote means to the initiative. Here, an excerpt: “But the 4-4 vote by the Supreme Court on…
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Worcester Telegram & Gazette: ‘Trump – Fascist or demagogue?’
Mary Jane Rein, executive director of the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies at Clark University, and Thomas Kühne, Strassler Professor of Holocaust History and director of the Strassler Center, explored the question of whether Republican presidential candidate Donald is a “fascist or demagogue” as part of an “As I See It” column for the Worcester Telegram &…
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Worcester Telegram & Gazette: ‘In wake of Orlando shootings, male health conference at Clark U. focuses on ‘toxic masculinity’ ‘
The Worcester Telegram & Gazette covered the Healthy Men and Boys summit, held at Clark University for the first time last week. The T&G quoted Clark Psychology Professor Michael E. Addis, an expert in men’s health. Here, an excerpt: “If you want a talking point for ‘toxic masculinity,’ look no further than the episodes that played…
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‘I’ve really felt at home at Clark’: A Q&A with GSOM student CarrieAnne Cormier
CarrieAnne Cormier, a local, part-time student in Clark’s Graduate School of Management, pictured above, spoke to GSOM communication specialist Meredith Galena about her experience, what brought her to Clark’s M.B.A. program and how she’s already utilizing her newfound knowledge in her position as vice president of retail operations and strategy at Avidia Bank. In approximately two more years, she’ll earn an…
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Oxford University Press podcast: Valerie Sperling on ‘Sex, Politics, and Putin’
Why do we see so many images of Vladimir Putin on a motorcycle or bare-chested, on horseback? And why did 12 young women at Moscow State University pose provocatively, Victoria’s Secret style, for a calendar celebrating the Russian leader’s birthday in 2011? These are the questions Clark University Valerie Sperling explores in her book “Sex, Politics,…
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The Conversation: ‘Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party?’
What are this year’s House and Senate primaries telling us about the health of our political system? Did Donald Trump kill the Tea Party? Those are two of the questions Robert Boatright, associate professor of political science, asks and answers in a contribution to The Conversation. The article also mentions his book “Getting Primaried: The Changing Politics of Congressional Primary…


