Inside Penn

In brief, what’s happening at Penn—whether it’s across campus or around the world.

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  • The Interdisciplinary Initiative in the History of the Built Environment looks beyond conventional power brokers

    The new initiative, introduced by the Department of City and Regional Planning at the Weitzman School, will incorporate a deeper understanding of history and how it influences the material world, and the social, political, and cultural context around city planning, preservation, and design.

    FULL STORY AT Weitzman School of Design

  • Monitoring the effects of the pandemic on metros and cities here and there

    As part of its Cities and Contagion Initiative, launched in April 2020, Penn IUR has covered and is continuing to cover public transportation, housing, commercial real estate, and specific industrial sectors in the nation’s urban economies, and has issued three briefs one year out.

    FULL STORY AT Penn IUR

  • Mary Frances Berry, winner of the 2021 Lewis Award for History and Social Justice

    Established in 2021 by the American Historical Association, the prize is offered annually to recognize a historian for leadership and sustained engagement at the intersection of historical work, public culture, and social justice. Berry is the Geraldine R. Segal Professor of American Social Thought and Professor of History Emerita. 

    FULL STORY AT Penn Arts & Sciences

  • NSF grant will support battery research and workforce training

    The Department of Materials Science and Engineering’s Eric Detsi will lead a team of researchers to develop more eco-friendly batteries that are based on sodium, rather than lithium, with a National Science Foundation grant of $2.7 million.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Engineering Today

  • Perry World House receives $500,000 grant to connect academic and policy communities

    The grant from the Carnegie Corporation of New York will support Perry World House’s efforts to connect Penn’s research and expertise with the global policy community as the world recovers from the COVID-19 pandemic.

    FULL STORY AT Perry World House

  • Marc Miskin receives 2021 Packard Fellowship for Science and Engineering for research on microrobots

    The assistant professor in the Department of Electrical and Systems Engineering will use the funds for research on microscopic robots to emulate fundamental biology, provide new ways of thinking about life and shape the microworld with precision and control.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Engineering Today

  • Penn researchers to study the impact of environmental and economic interventions on reducing health disparities in Black Philadelphia neighborhoods

    A grant of nearly $10M will fund research to investigate the impact of neighborhood place-based and financial well-being interventions, targeting the root causes of structural racism that contribute to poor health in Black communities.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Medicine News

  • Heavy users of conservative media more willing to take Ivermectin for COVID-19

    Four in 10 Americans, and 7 in 10 heavy users of conservative media, say they would take ivermectin if they had been exposed to someone who has COVID-19, according to a new survey by the Annenberg Public Policy Center.

    FULL STORY AT Annenberg Public Policy Center

  • Dani Bassett elected an American Physical Society Fellow

    The J. Peter Skirkanich Professor in the departments of Bioengineering and Electrical and Systems Engineering, has been elected a 2021 Fellow of the American Physical Society, for significant contributions to the network modeling of the human brain, including dynamical changes caused by evolution, learning, aging, and disease.

    FULL STORY AT Penn Bioengineering Blog

  • Why the U.S. housing boom isn’t a bubble

    Wharton real estate and finance professor Benjamin Keys says it’s not likely that the current real estate market bubble will burst in the way it did in 2008, 2009, and 2010. Although the frenzied buying and inflated prices are reminiscent of the run-up to the recession, Keys says there are several factors that make the current market different.

    FULL STORY AT Knowledge at Wharton