- January 19, 2021Every day we watch the COVID-19 crisis unfold, we brace for a summer of hurricanes reported on the news, and we watch as communities across the U.S. and around the world rebuild after natural disasters.
- January 19, 2021We asked undergraduate students for frank answers as to how the spring distance learning affected them. Guess what? They liked it.
- January 19, 2021Schar School Associate Professor Bonnie Stabile walks us through how social constructions work and what it tells us about how we think about women.
- January 19, 2021Schar School professors had a lot on their minds in the month of May, not all of it about viruses. See our roundup of op-eds.
- January 19, 2021Panel: The pandemic lockdown might be easing in some parts of the world, but its effects will last well past the reopening.
- January 19, 2021Jack Goldstone explains the economic and political forecast of the COVID-19 pandemic as well as discusses who is responsible.
- January 19, 2021In-person meetings between lobbyists and policymakers on Capitol Hill are, for now, a thing of the past. Will they be back in the future? Our webinar takes a look.
- January 19, 2021Government and International Politics majors Sasha Silva and Sally Kishi won ‘Most Interesting Presentation’ for their research on the rise of populism in the 2017 Chilean general election.
- January 19, 2021Through problem-based learning opportunities and innovative lesson planning, Justin Gest is teaching his students to be open minded and independent thinkers. Mason just gave him an award for it.
- January 19, 2021Two studies by James Olds and Nadine Kabbani shows prior exposure to nicotine creates vulnerability in the cardiopulmonary system and the brain. The world has been warned.
- January 19, 2021Four Schar School Master’s in International Commerce and Policy graduates win awards from global trade compliance training firm, Content Enablers.
- January 19, 2021Schar School professor Jack Goldstone becomes the third George Mason University professor and the second from the Schar School to become a Carnegie Fellow.