Deborah Yaffe
Deborah Yaffe content overview
Where Old and New Meet
As part of its biggest expansion ever, Princeton is transforming its campus while attempting to balance tradition and change
Beloved, No-Frills Rugby Reunion Is Known as Sober Sunday
It’s no tent party — and they prefer it that way
‘It Put Steel In My Spine’
They were isolated and harassed. They were nurtured and supported. They were Princeton’s first four-year undergraduate class of women.
Humans as Nature
Princetonians in the environmental humanities add new dimensions to climate research
Exhibit Canceled After Dispute Between Library and Donor
The two disagreed over a plan to display work by artists with Confederate ties
Lives: Laurence Desaix Anderson ’58
He Helped Old Enemies To Reconcile
The Color of Classics
A discipline focused on the ancient world faces a contemporary racial reckoning
Professors Advocate Free —and Controversial — Speech in Academia
The Journal of Controversial Ideas provides a home for contentious scholarship
The Politics of History
A conservative scholar of Lincoln and the battle over how we teach about America’s past
Lives: Franklyn Allen ‘Tex’ Harris ’60
His Truth-Telling Kept America on the Right Side of History
Scholars Warn That Without Moratoriums, U.S. Could Face Torrent of Evictions
The Princeton-based Eviction Lab is tracking the nation’s rental-housing crisis
After 50 Years, National Organization for Women Daycare Still Flourishes
An oral history project marks UNOW’s milestone
Q&A: Jennifer S. Hirsch ’88 on Shifting the Conversation
Using a public-health approach, new perspectives on campus sexual assaults are found
Lives: Emile Karafiol ’55
His Personal Project Grew to Preserve History
Seminary Pledges to Set Aside $27.6 Million As Reparations for Its Ties to Slavery
Scholarships, fellowships planned
Academic Anxiety
Chinese scholars express uneasiness about the growing trend of federal scrutiny
Lives: James Holland ’45
His Groundbreaking Treatment Saved Children With Cancer
Bye, Bye, Loneliness
For Jeremy Nobel ’77, feeling alone is a public-health hazard
Lest we forget
Princeton University Press republishes seminal works of American political thought
Lives: Janice Nittoli *85
She Spent Her Years Advocating for Workers and Families