Rolling Up Our Sleeves
New lab is a hub for engaging with global racial and social inequality.
New lab is a hub for engaging with global racial and social inequality.
Many of the things Nathaniel Hunt ’22 learned as a philosophy major proved beneficial when he conceived a business idea, and his partnership with the Peter T. Paul Entrepreneurship CenterÌýhelped take the project from concept to Holloway Competition winner. Hear Nathaniel’s story in his own words.
The first cohort of students is enrolled in theÌýUNH-4U program, designed toÌýopen doors to a mostly traditional college experience that was previously closed to students with intellectual disabilities.
Originally published on the , this article examines the academic partnership between the Carsey School and OFN, with an interview from Austin Vasko, a graduate from the Master in Community Development (MCD) program who used the education award as an OFN CDFI member.
This recent article – written by Keystone International and featured on the Carsey School of Public Policy blog – examines some of the different career fields that public service graduates can use their degrees in, including law enforcement, nonprofit work, higher education, and more. Past and present Carsey students are interviewed.
Deqa Dhalac '13G, a graduate of the Carsey School's Master in Community Development program, was formally seated as the top elected leader of Maine’s fourth largest city, South Portland. She is believed to be the first Somali American to have been elected as a mayor in the United States.
Dean Michele Dillon looks back and forward in the College of Liberal Arts.
Conversational English class helps UNH housekeepers feel more at home in America.
Abrita Kuthumi ’21, a political science/international affairs major from Barrington, New Hampshire, is a winner of the prestigious Marshall Scholarship, one of just 41 students to earn the award in the nation, according to an announcement Monday, Dec. 13 by the British government.
Kuthumi has the added distinction of being the first Marshall Scholar in UNH’s history.