2026 Alumni Awards Winners: Top row (left to right): Sophie Maríñez, Gaffar Gailani, Avishan Bodjnoud, and Philip Kreniske: Bottom row (left to right): Ryan Donovan, Mary Sano, and Frank J. Fabozzi.
Natalie Musteata and Alexandre Singh won the Academy Award for Best Live Action Short for “Two People Exchanging Saliva.” As Natalie Musteata (Ph.D. ’19, Art History) worked on her dissertation, she ...
The CUNY Graduate Center’s Leon Levy Center for Biography is pleased to inaugurate the David Levering Lewis Fellowship on the African Diaspora. The Lewis Fellowship is funded by a $1 million gift from ...
In Natalie Musteata’s dystopian Paris, a kiss can get you killed and slaps are currency. That’s the premise of Two People Exchanging Saliva, the latest short film by the Graduate Center alumna, now ...
Ph.D. candidate Thorfun Gehebe (Speech-Language-Hearing Sciences) aims to bridge the gap between speech-language sciences research and clinical practice to better serve bilingual children. An ...
Kendra Sullivan (Ph.D. ’25, English), director of the Center for the Humanities at the Graduate Center, has been awarded a 2026 Pushcart Prize for Reps, her first full-length poetry collection. The ...
In this episode of The Thought Project, CUNY Graduate Center Dean for the Sciences Brian R. Gibney discusses how the Graduate Center is positioning itself at the forefront of the AI revolution. Gibney ...
A new report from the Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latino Studies at the CUNY Graduate Center shows that New York City's Dominican population has declined by nearly 13% since 2021, ...
The CUNY Graduate Center community mourns the loss of former Psychology Professor Arthur S. Reber, whose research on implicit learning — how people absorb patterns and knowledge without being aware of ...
Scientists know that social isolation can alter brain structure and lead to the breakdown of myelin, the fatty coating that insulates nerve fibers in the brain. But they don’t yet know exactly how or ...
As nations worldwide race to expand nuclear energy to meet growing energy demands and address climate change, cost remains the biggest barrier. In the comment article, “Can China break the ‘cost curse ...
Ruth O’Brien, who earned her Ph.D. in political science at UCLA, joined the Graduate Center’s doctoral faculty in 1997 and, in 2004, founded the Writing Politics specialization in political science.
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