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Weatherhead's Roman Sheremeta comments on potential developments of Russia-Ukraine war
Economists are questioning Russia's economic data, seeing a more troubled picture Business Insider: Roman Sheremeta, associate professor at Weatherhead School of Management, said Russian President Vladimir Putin must demonstrate his economy can sustain the war for two to three more years;…
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Law's Jessie Hill comments on Department of Justice’s dismissal of anti-abortion harassment lawsuit
DOJ to drop lawsuit against anti-abortion group accused of harassing Northeast Ohio clinic patients cleveland.com (subscription required): Jessie Hill, the Judge Ben C. Green Professor of Law, explained why the Department of Justice’s dismissal of an anti-abortion harassment lawsuit raises…
immigration
Law's Aleksandar Cuic examines legality of ICE raids
Breaking down the legalities of the ICE raids WOIO: Aleksandar Cuic, director of the Immigration Clinic at the School of Law, said there are no laws preventing U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers from entering schools, churches or hospitals, adding that optics would generally…
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New Case Western Reserve University study identifies key protein’s role in psoriasis
Finding offers potential new target for treatment
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CWRU launches AI in Education initiative hub
Case Western Reserve University has unveiled the AI in Education initiative hub, a resource that serves as a one-stop shop for all things artificial intelligence (AI) at CWRU. The hub centralizes resources, highlights news and events, and provides updates on how AI is being integrated into the…
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Medicine’s Beata Jastrzebska leads research into potential treatment for inherited eye diseases
Beata Jastrzebska, associate professor in the Department of Pharmacology at the School of Medicine, and her research team used a virtual screening approach that identified potential treatment options for a group of inherited eye diseases that cause blindness. Their work was published in PLOS…
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Medicine’s Bibekananda Sahoo leads research published in Cell
Research out of the Xinghong Dai's lab in the Department of Physiology and Biophysics and led by postdoctoral scholar Bibekananda Sahoo recently revealed that NINJ1, a small membrane protein, actively drives plasma membrane rupture (PMR) during lytic cell death, challenging the long-standing belief…
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English’s Walt Hunter explores poet’s end-of-life works
Walt Hunter, professor and chair of the Department of English at the College of Arts and Sciences, recently penned a piece published in The Atlantic. Titled “When Poets Face Death,” Hunter’s article explores the idea of facing death in writing, looking at three poets whose last poems offer…
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School of Medicine researchers to lead webinar for HEALing Communities Study
Emily Nelson, research associate at the School of Medicine, and Darcy Freedman, the Swetland Professor of Environmental Health Sciences, will lead a webinar for the HEALing Communities Study. They will present “Tips for Engaging Coalitions to Respond to the Opioid Crisis: Lessons Learned from…
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Political science’s Kathryn C. Lavelle writes chapter in Teaching International Organizations
Kathryn C. Lavelle, the Ellen and Dixon Long Professor in World Affairs in the Department of Political Science at the College of Arts and Sciences, wrote a chapter in the recently published book Teaching International Organizations, published by Edward Elgar Publishing. Lavelle’s chapter covers…