Lawmakers worsen the campus free-speech crisis; a quarter system complicates students' job hunt; why lottery-based admissions is a bad idea; and more.
Academe Today

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Faculty Diversity
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Coalition for Ethnic Studies at Yale
By Sarah Brown

Thirteen scholars say they’ll cut ties with the university’s ethnicity, race, and migration program, which they say has been stifled by a lack of resources and stature, despite a $50-million effort to diversity the faculty. PREMIUM

Faculty Hiring
By Alina Tugend

Putting principles into practice takes leadership, resources, and commitment. These colleges are using multistage anti-bias procedures to shake up the status quo. PREMIUM

Campus Speech
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Angela Major, The Janesville Gazette via AP Images
By Katherine Mangan

The national debate has become “a deeply partisan feud, with each side trying to catch the other in transgressive acts that can be amplified to rile up the faithful.”

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Leadership & Governance
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Hampshire College
By Zipporah Osei

The resignation followed months of uncertainty as the small private institution in Massachusetts attempts to fend off closure.

Finance
By Lee Gardner and Vimal Patel

Distinctiveness has long been the college’s calling card. Now it may threaten its survival. PREMIUM

Students
By Terry Nguyen

Because they finish classes about a month behind their peers on the semester calendar, critics say they are at an unexpected disadvantage in their job search.

International
By Karin Fischer

America’s global academic engagement began as a response to 9/11 and ended with the embrace of Trump’s America First platform.

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Commentary
By Leslie Finger and Thomas Gift

The antidote to randomness in the college-admissions process isn’t more randomness. PREMIUM

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Advice
By Danna M. Zeiger

In STEM fields, students with an unplanned pregnancy need mentors who will guide rather than dictate the way forward.

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Injecting trustworthiness and legitimacy into law enforcement is transforming the way police handle a range of encounters.

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