The Sandra Day O’Connor College of Law at ASU, Penn Global, and the University of Copenhagen, sign an MOU to create the Heritage Warfare Consortium
The Heritage Warfare Consortium will bring together multidisciplinary experts in the field of cultural property protection and accountability, by identifying threats to communities, the military and strategic value of cultural heritage as predictor of aggression and genocide, and the changing lens of accountability.
Dennis Sourvanos receives ADA Foundation Crest and Oral-B Promising Researcher Award
The NIDCR postdoctoral trainee at Penn Dental Medicine is the recipient of the American Dental Association Foundation 2023 Crest and Oral-B Promising Researcher Award in support of his multidisciplinary, translational preclinical research, which has developed new investigative avenues in Photobiomodulation light therapy.
Developing a new type of data system for suicide prevention efforts
Researchers from Penn Medicine and the Wharton School have collaborated with Philadelphia’s Department of Behavioral Health and Intellectual Disability Services to develop a new type of data infrastructure for regional suicide prevention efforts.
Announcing Living the Hard Promise: A dialogue series
The series calls upon Penn to become a campus community that engages all members in empathetic dialogues. It will inform our understanding of today’s most pressing issues—from the concerns of Israelis and Palestinians to the rise of organized hate in the United States to the challenges of upholding free speech while ensuring civility and mutual respect.
For this month’s selections, the Penn Libraries partnered with Penn Native Community Council, which was formed in 2018 to highlight the histories, heritage, and cultures of the Native American, First Nations, and Indigenous peoples of the Americas.
Cardiovascular disease in American Indian and Alaska Native populations reflects grave health disparities
Indigenous populations have the lowest life expectancy of all racial groups and experience disproportionate burdens for chronic conditions like cardiovascular disease. To evaluate these disparities, LDI senior fellows Lauren A. Eberly, Sameed Ahmed M. Khatana, Judy A. Shea, Peter W. Groeneveld, and colleagues used Medicare administrative data and the Distressed Communities Index to assess trends in the incidence and prevalence of cardiovascular disease among American Indian and Alaska Native Medicare beneficiaries