Brewing business: A Wharton undergrad who manages Penn’s student-run café Image: Courtesy of Wharton Stories Brewing business: A Wharton undergrad who manages Penn’s student-run café How third-year Wharton undergrad Olivia Turman finds community, leadership, and clarity through Williams Café. 2 min. read
How Penn faculty are innovating their assignments How Penn faculty are innovating their assignments Instructors at Penn are engaging students beyond the traditional essay format or exam. 7 min. read
Lauder Class of 2025 graduate showcase Lauder Class of 2025 graduate showcase Four Lauder Institute students reflect on their journeys through the Wharton and School of Arts & Sciences joint-degree program, which weds international politics, economics, history, culture, and language.
Aiming for a ‘holistic representation’ career as dual-degree Law and SP2 grad Christina Bartzokis is earning dual degrees from Penn Carey Law and the School of Social Policy & Practice, and is headed to Louisiana to start her practice as a public defender.nocred Aiming for a ‘holistic representation’ career as dual-degree Law and SP2 grad Christina Bartzokis worked as a Child Protective Services case worker for three years in rural Oregon. Now she’s set her sights on Louisiana, where she’ll serve as a public defender. 3 min. read
How to teach your child about financial literacy How to teach your child about financial literacy Wharton’s Olivia S. Mitchell offers tips for raising a generation of smart spenders and savers. 2 min. read
Can we still detect AI-generated content? Can we still detect AI-generated content? As models like GPT-4 and Claude get better at mimicking humans, researchers at the Wharton School offer a new way to test watermarking—the hidden markers used to identify machine-made text.
The economic impact of tariffs The economic impact of tariffs Sweeping tariffs would raise new revenue, but they would also depress GDP, wages, and Treasury bond demand and prices, according to the nonpartisan Penn Wharton Budget Model.
Cary Coglianese on the future of administrative law Cary Coglianese on the future of administrative law Penn Carey Law’s Edward B. Shils Professor of Law and Professor of Political Science has published one of the first scholarly analyses of Supreme Court’s landmark Loper Bright decision, which overturned the four-decade-old Chevron doctrine and sparked intense debates over the future of administrative law. 2 min. read
Black Law Student Association explores constitutional law, literacy, and advocacy in South Africa Black Law Student Association explores constitutional law, literacy, and advocacy in South Africa This spring, Penn Carey Law’s Black Law Student Association traveled to South Africa to engage in several high-impact activities focused on constitutional law, social justice, and legal education. Each year, the group travels internationally to give back to the Black diaspora and learn about different issues Black communities are facing around the world.
Teaching crisis negotiation For the two-day exercise, the students organized into nine teams, each representing a different nation, to resolve an international dispute in the South China Sea with diplomatic, informational, military, legal, and economic factors at play.(Image: Courtesy of Penn Carey Law) Teaching crisis negotiation Each spring, the U.S. Army War College holds an International Strategic Crisis Negotiation Exercise at Penn Carey Law, designed to engage and educate law students in the process of crisis negotiation at the strategic level. 2 min. read