
The Lepage Center will host a virtual three-day workshop on March 12-14 titled “Count the Costs Research Weekend."

Lisa Molix, Tiffany Lin and Emilie Taylor Welty will study how the community reacts to public spaces and monuments memorializing contentious historical figures.

Kyla Denwood is a fourth-year student from Lombard, Illinois, double majoring in international development and economics with a minor in Spanish.

Alumnus Alex Hernandez (right) and his wife, Megan (center), contributed a $100,000 grant for the creation of the Fund for Military Students.

The School of Science and Engineering has been awarded a $1 million grant to fund the work of Denys Bondar (left) and Diyar Talbayev (right).

Adeola Ogunkeyede, Tulane Law alumna, has been named the first chief public defender in Travis County, Texas.

Tulane will honor Gloria Bryant Banks, Pearlie Hardin Elloie and Marilyn S. Piper with a commissioned painting created by Terrance Osborne.

The episode focused on Hurley and Jackson's accomplishments in breaking barriers and opening doors.

The School of Liberal Arts will hold the second annual Bobby Yan Lectureship in Media and Social Change on Thursday, Feb. 18.

Tulane President Michael Fitts is joining the socially distanced celebration of Yardi Gras.

Chad Roy, director of infectious disease aerobiology at the Tulane National Primate Research Center, is corresponding author of the study.

Laura McKinney outlines how environmental degradation affects a woman’s health and susceptibility to many infectious diseases.

Dean Thomas LaVeist authored a New York Times op/ed, signed by 59 other Black health experts from the American Public Health Association.

President Fitts will host the third installment of the Presidential Speaker Series, Mindset: Breaking Barriers, Thursday, Feb. 11.

Antonio Milton is the first Black editor-in-chief of the Tulane Law Review, which is among the most respected of legal journals in the nation.

Board of Tulane member Richard Yulman, his daughter Katy Yulman-Williamson and son-in-law Greg Williamson are sponsoring the Next Wave Scholarship Challenge.

In his new book, Vernon Valentine Palmer uncovers the true identity of the men who wrote the English translation of the Digest of Orleans of 1808.

As the COVID-19 crisis engulfs the Black community, Thomas LaVeist, dean of the School of Public Health and Tropical Medicine, explains why.

The Putting Policy in its Place program announced its first eight fellows from the Tulane University School of Social Work.