All News
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An essay co-authored by Alan Cafruny, the Henry Platt Bristol Chair of International Affairs and Professor of Government, was recently published in an edited volume from Routledge titled Transnational Capital and Class Fractions.
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Prominent foreign policy expert Robert Kagan P’20 discussed his latest book, “The Jungle Grows Back: America and Our Imperiled World,” at Hamilton on Oct. 5. James S. Sherman Professor of Government Philip Klinkner introduced Kagan and his many accomplishments, which includes serving in the State Department as a member of the policy planning staff, publishing numerous books on world politics, and writing as a contributing columnist for the Washington Post.
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One of the benefits of Hamilton's Washington, D.C. program is the ability to connect with Hamilton College’s vast alumni network in the capital. Taking advantage of this, the D.C. program students recently met with Matthew Zeller ’04. Zeller is the founder and CEO of No One Left Behind.
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Elise LePage ’18 earned national recognition as a finalist for the American Physical Society’s 2018 LeRoy Apker Award. The award recognizes undergraduate students for outstanding achievements in physics.
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Students on the Washington D.C. program recently had the opportunity to meet with Johnnie Carson, who served as ambassador to several African nations and was the assistant secretary of state for African affairs under President Obama. He was also a visiting professor at Hamilton College where he taught courses on African politics.
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Amy Gaffney, director of the Oral Communication Center, co-authored “Spewing nonsense [or not]: Communication competence and socialization in optics and photonics workplaces,” published in the journal Communication Education.
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More than 200 posters plus souvenir pins, banners, toys, even cigarettes, comprise Associate Professor of Russian Frank Sciacca’s unparalleled collection of Soviet-era propaganda recently donated to the Burke Library Special Collections.
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Three Hamilton environmental studies students and their professor had credentials to attend a U.N. meeting where, for the first time, all the countries of the world hashed out details of a global treaty governing the "high seas."
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