Meet the 2024 tenured professors in the MIT School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences
Faculty members granted tenure in anthropology; comparative media studies/writing; philosophy; political science; and science, technology, and society.
Faculty members granted tenure in anthropology; comparative media studies/writing; philosophy; political science; and science, technology, and society.
New professors join anthropology, economics, history, linguistics, music and theater arts, and philosophy departments, as well as the Program in Science, Technology, and Society.
Journalists covering key science issues around the globe will join the MIT community in August.
School of Humanities, Arts, and Social Sciences appoints new heads across multiple academic units.
During a recent history of technology symposium at MIT, participants shared exciting ideas about the future of their field.
In the first quintillionth of a second, the universe may have sprouted microscopic black holes with enormous amounts of nuclear charge, MIT physicists propose.
Discounting calculations are ubiquitous today — thanks partly to the English clergy who spread them amid turmoil in the 1600s, an MIT scholar shows.
Kate Brown, MIT professor of history, discusses how ordinary people taking action in their communities can offer hope for the future.
The Fulbright US Student Program funds research, study, and teaching opportunities abroad.
William Deringer studies “very old things and very technical things” — that have never been more relevant.
Extractive industries threaten water, glaciers, and livelihoods, but new research offers hope.
MIT historian of science Robin Wolfe Scheffler takes a close look at the progress of biomedical research in the U.S.
The Knight Science Journalism Program’s Victor K. McElheny Award honors outstanding local and regional journalists’ reporting on science, public health, tech, and the environment.
Associate Professor Lydia Bourouiba and artist Argha Manna take readers through a series of discoveries in infectious disease.
Cosmologist and MLK Scholar Morgane König uses gravitational waves to study the universe’s origins, inflation, and present trajectory.