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Lawyers, students, researchers and higher education leaders debate whether Harvard should consider a deal with the Trump administration.
A federal judge directed the Trump administration to restore “every visa holder and applicant to the position that individual would have been" before the ban was enacted.
The university is trying to avoid the appearance of appeasement, something other powerful institutions that made deals with President Trump found impossible.
A group of Harvard University alumni urged the school not to cave to the Trump administration’s demands as it restarts talks with the White House.
How well are you doing on each of those fronts? A version of this article appeared in the July–August 2025 issue of Harvard Business Review.
BOSTON — The federal government says it's freezing more than $2.2 billion in grants and $60 million in contracts to Harvard University, after the institution said it would defy the Trump ...
Change is no longer episodic; it is continuous—and people are tired. Ania W. Masinter is an executive editor at Harvard Business Review.
The Frontiers in Digital Child Safety initiative seeks to contribute to ongoing debates about novel ways to advance child safety through a series of open-source materials, including research briefs, ...
Every once in a while, the president has a day — a single, 24-hour period — in which his authoritarian vision comes into sharp relief.
Has King Dollar been dethroned? Harvard economist Ken Rogoff joins WSJ’s Take On the Week Podcast to talk about why he thinks the purchasing power of the U.S. dollar is in decline, what this ...
After graduating from WSU in '63, Chaplin took an opportunity to be a "world problems" teacher, senior advisor, and head track coach at Wapato High School on the Yakima Reservation. He met his wife, ...