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He is also a longtime observer of Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. From his home in Jerusalem, where he is currently ...
June 12, 2025 The Summer 2025 edition of Brandeis Magazine delivers fascinating stories, including how a Brandeis graduate played a key role in preserving Notre-Dame Cathedral’s iconic sound in the ...
Latest Event — Crown Center at 20: The Future of the Middle East We marked 20 years of bridging scholarship and real-world insight on the Middle East with an anniversary symposium exploring the ...
The Sonic Soul of Notre-Dame After fire ravaged France’s beloved cathedral in 2019, acoustician Brian F.G. Katz ’90 helped preserve the building’s singular sound — and, in the process, revealed ...
A Digital Renaissance Using software that can re-create old-world artisanship, computer science professor Harry Mairson builds violins and cellos that resound with musical life.
Welcome to the MRSEC! Welcome to the Brandeis University’s Bioinspired Materials Research Science and Engineering Center (MRSEC)! We are pleased to have you join our NSF-funded center and community.
Leir Professor of the Economics of the Middle East in the Crown Center for Middle East Studies at Brandeis University, reflects on the internal and external pressures shaping Iran’s future — from ...
Getting your prescription filled from a farm may seem incongruous, but that’s the strategy behind the VegRx program at Waltham Fields Community Farm, and participants say this initiative is making ...
For more resources, please see the Crown Center analyses which delve into the roots and evolution of the conflict between Hamas and Israel. The opinions and findings expressed in this Conversation ...
This morning we awoke to news of a deadly terrorist attack on Israel. Many of us in the Brandeis community have close family, friends, colleagues and former classmates and students in the region, and ...
Joel Christensen is Professor and Chair in the Department of Classical Studies at Brandeis University. This article originally appeared in The Conversation.
If you asked a Jew in 19th-century Poland, Iraq, or even New York about tikkun olam, they might have shrugged their shoulders and said they didn't know much about it. "It was a pretty obscure term," ...