Jim Keogh
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‘This course went deep into their heart and soul’
The Becker School of Design & Technology recently hosted the Games for Good Conference, showcasing advancements in “serious” game storytelling and technologies that promote positive social impact and change.
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‘We have to continue to bend the curve’
Clark faculty who attended COP30 shared their impressions of progress and challenges that were illuminated during the U.N.’s two-week climate conference.
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A Hero in our midst
Hillary Cohen ’07 is in the running to be the 2025 CNN Hero of the Year for her work to feed the hungry of Los Angeles.
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Free speech is fraught with nuance, contradiction
This semester’s Presidential Lecture was a probing discussion about the benefits and challenges of free expression in the public discourse.
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‘A Clark education is powerfully different’
Ron Shaich ’76, L.H.D. ’14, came to Clark to study government, but like many Clarkies, his time on campus exposed him to new and unexpected experiences, fresh perspectives, and alternative pathways toward personal transformation.
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‘Let’s take this journey together’
“Feminist Curiosity is for These Dark Times” is billed as Professor Cynthia Enloe’s “final Clark lecture,” and the Oct. 16 event will indeed be the coda to her long-running series of fall lectures that she’s been delivering since about 2010. But she’s quick to add that this is far from the end of her story.
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Toby Sisson selected for RISD Museum residency
The RISD Museum has announced that Toby Sisson, associate professor of studio art, has been selected as the museum’s research resident for 2026.
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Clark makes its presence known at Climate Week
Clark faculty, administrators, and alumni are in New York to contribute to the important global conversations taking place at Climate Week NYC, billed as the world’s second-largest climate gathering.
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‘I wanted to be in the communities’
From global to grassroots, Solange Biandaky-Badji, Ph.D. ’08, is a leader
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‘We need to generate the energy that leads to more optimism, hope, and action’
With two shovelfuls of dirt applied to the base of a red maple that now grows beside the Shaich Family Alumni and Student Engagement Center, Clark University on Monday signaled its enduring commitment to confront the most pernicious threats to the health of the planet.









