Students learn some of the current understanding of how galaxies in our Universe form and evolve over time, as well as the data science techniques commonly used by extragalactic researchers in their work.
You are here
Headline Archive for Rebecca Raber
-
-
This anthropology course explores human attempts to extend sensory capacities through robots, sensors, nonhuman animals, and plants, considering how colonialism, race, disability, gender, and surveillance shape the desire to sense beyond the human.
-
This history course explores Indigenous women’s experiences in the history of Latin America including the dynamics of women’s social movements in the region, whose agendas often conflict with established gendered traditions.
-
Following last year’s virtual celebration, this year’s in-person return was the biggest ever Family and Friends Weekend.
-
This course explores anthropological approaches to the law and legal regimes, with special emphasis on the relationship between law, power and politics, social hierarchy, and the institutionalization of inequality in the United States in the context of the War on Drugs.
-
This health studies course explores the human experience of cancer patients and their families to provide a lens to critically examine the healthcare system and sociopolitical conditions of their societies.
-
A new paper by a team that includes Associate Professor of Environmental Studies Jonathan Wilson provides a new perspective on a chapter in plant evolutionary history by focusing on the role of low temperatures in shaping terrestrial forests.
-
This modern Japanese language course immerses students in an array of common Japanese media forms that subtly reinforce powerful, widely held, and often unquestioned historical, cultural, and political preconceptions underlying popular ideas about Japanese identity.
-
This fall, CAPS welcomed two new senior staff member, 12 graduate trainees, and two new psychiatric consultants.
-
This first-year writing seminar explores the structural and historical conditions that define higher education, and offers an opportunity to explore those conditions by asking what college is as a historical, political-economic, and cultural institution.
-
Albany Records just released Resonances, the third album of compositions by the Ruth Marshall Magill Professor of Music.
-
Highlighting faculty professional activities, including conferences, exhibitions, performances, awards, and publications.
-
Haverford’s “free store” supports both student needs and the College’s commitment to sustainability.
-
Learn more about the new assistant professor of biology.
-
The largest class ever of new Fords was inducted into the campus community over a five-day Customs program.