Tonight’s March for Justice for Breonna Taylor
There is no one right way to react. If you choose to join in peaceful gatherings or protests, we support making your voice heard. We also want you to be safe.
There is no one right way to react. If you choose to join in peaceful gatherings or protests, we support making your voice heard. We also want you to be safe.
The Bright Lights Film Series will resume its screenings online for Fall 2020 with a wide range of documentaries focused on tackling different, intersecting social justice issues.
A 20-foot mural of words taken from the late Congressman and civil rights leader John Lewis’ final essay now covers a wall of the Quiet Lounge in Piano Row, a powerful rebuttal of hateful graffiti found on campus last spring.
Find out about the U.S. Department of Education’s 2020 Title IX Regulations and the implications for colleges and schools across the country at a Community Update and Q&A on Emerson’s New Power-Based Interpersonal Violence (PBIV) Policy Tuesday, September 8, 6:00 pm.
Emerson, along with all colleges and universities that receive federal funding from the U.S. Department of Education, including financial aid on behalf of students, are required to comply with the new Title IX Regulations
The past four months have been a period of significant upheaval for people around the world, including the very communities in which we live, learn, and work.
To our students and alumni, please know that we are listening and we are acting.
We invite all Emerson College staff, faculty, and students will join us as we raise funds for these issues that are critical to our friends, neighbors, and fellow citizens around Boston.
Two Writing, Literature and Publishing (WLP) faculty members and a former WLP faculty member were in the news recently for their involvement with Writers Against Racial Injustice, a coalition to raise money for the Alabama-based Equal Justice Initiative.
President Lee Pelton will chair a new initiative from Boston Mayor Marty Walsh to raise millions of dollars to address racial inequity in the city, the Boston Globe reports.