News & Stories
The stories of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences: the achievements and activities of our faculty, departments, and programs.
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The American Society of Criminology recognized Anderson for his pioneering ethnographic research on urban crime.
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Ferguson, William Robertson Coe Professor of Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies and Professor of American Studies and Black Studies, is widely recognized as a leading thinker on gender, race, queerness. The Gauss Seminars in Criticism are among Princeton's longest running and best-known public lecture series.
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Daut, Professor of French and Black Studies, is one of three finalists for this year's prestigious history prize.
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Incoming FAS faculty member Destin Jenkins is documenting the history of debt in the United States and Black governance after the Civil Rights movement.
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Elizabeth Hinton, who joined the Yale faculty in 2020, is one of the nation’s leading experts on policing and mass incarceration in the United States.
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In a Q&A, Christen Smith discusses her research in Black communities in Brazil, the undervaluing of Black women’s scholarly contributions, and her favorite ways to unwind.
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In a new book, Yale’s Marlene Daut follows the remarkable trajectory of Christophe’s life and Haiti’s transition from enslaved colony to free Black nation.
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Thomas Allen Harris, Professor in the Practice of Film & Media Studies and African American Studies, has been awarded $3.2 million from the National Science Foundation.
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Incoming FAS faculty member Christen Smith illuminates the impact of police violence on Black communities in Brazil and the United States.
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In her new book, Awakening the Ashes: An Intellectual History of the Haitian Revolution (University of North Carolina Press), Marlene L. Daut, Professor of French and of African American Studies in the Faculty of Arts and Sciences, focuses on the work of Haitian scholars and historians who have been silenced for centuries.