In March, leaders of nine student groups gathered with staff at the Center for Multicultural Life to plan this year’s Bowdoin’s Asian and Pacific Islander Heritage Month.
Lindsey talked about what drew him to economics as a student, where he thinks the markets are going, and why he’s glad he’s not a lawyer in a wide-ranging conversation with students on a recent visit to campus.
A group of students and two faculty members traveled during spring break to explore the effects of digital technologies on people living in rural communities and less affluent areas of Brazil.
Global support for Evan Gershkovich ’14 remains strong one year after his imprisonment, as supporters of the jailed Wall Street Journal reporter take part in a series of coordinated activities around the world.
What would you do for the chance to act in a movie scene with Meryl Streep?
Russia scholar Page Herrlinger discusses her new book, which explores the life and legacy of “Brother Ioann” Churikov— a charismatic early twentieth-century spiritual leader whose followers were targeted by the Russian Orthodox Church and, later, the Soviet state.
Three government students travel to New York, along with their professor, to present their research at a national conference. The Bowdoin scholars are examining why there are significant differences in turnout among student voters according to their racial and ethnic identity.
Each year, Projects for Peace awards grants of $10,000 to more than 125 college students who have proposed “innovative, community-centered, and scalable responses to the world’s most pressing issues.”