Regardless of where you are, your Northeastern network is there for you. Bond, socialize, learn, or build personal connections with your community and the global Northeastern network. Find an event to attend.
The College of Science and the Barnett Institute of Chemical and Biological Analysis welcomes you to the annual Richard Saferstein Lecture in Forensic Science. This year, our distinguished lecturer is Peter R. De Forest, Professor Emeritus of Criminalistics at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, City University of New York. Hear Professor De Forest's titled lecture "Traces, Historical Science and the Crime Scene: The Role of the Scientist/Investigator."
Margaret Angell, Head of Partnerships and Operations, Chris Mallett, Chief Administrative Officer, and Michael Pollastri, Senior Vice Provost for Portland; Professor of Chemistry and Chemical Biology discuss the Roux Institute’s progress to date and the impact the Institution is having on the local community.
Part of the COVID-19: Law and Social Justice Community Conversation series, join Professors Brook Baker and Jonathan Kahn on the topic of making vaccines accessible. This virtual series will be held weekly on Monday evenings from 6:30-7:30 pm ET.
Dianna Bronchuk, MS’19, Program Coordinator, Office of Alumni Relations gave a virtual look at Northeastern University’s landmarks—some still standing and some now gone—and how the Boston campus has transformed from its humble beginnings in the YMCA Boston, to purchasing the Massachusetts Horticultural Hall last year.
Join the Northeastern University School of Nursing and the School Health Academy at their voting day virtual conference. Hear from educational leaders on the mental and physical health concerns of the COVID-19 pandemic. This event provides 4 contact hours and 4 PDP’s.
Expert panelists and participants in this interdisciplinary symposium will consider how gender and feminist activism should inform our thinking about the upcoming elections. We will look at how feminists might engage social movements, digital spaces, and broader communities in trying to effect social change. Panels will invite conversations about new forms of media in the hands of feminist activists, historical perspectives on gender and electoral politics (in celebration of the anniversary of suffrage), mainstream media coverage of elections through the lens of gender, and leveraging the unprecedented visibility of women (particularly women of color) in both electoral and grassroots politics. This is symposium is presented by the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program, supported by the Northeastern Humanities Center.
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