Pace University News
Pace Now
Pace News
Latest News
Pace University will host, "At a Point of Change," an outdoor student photography exhibition, which will line the fence on Frankfort Street outside One Pace Plaza in Lower Manhattan. The exhibit is open to the public and will run for two months, beginning May 9, 2022.
Pace University's documentary film team – PaceDocs – last night premiered Tide to Table: The Remarkable Journey of Oysters at the Jacob Burns Film Center. More than 200 people turned out for the event, which was the first in-person premiere for the program since 2019, before the pandemic. The film continues a distinguished tradition of producing documentaries that shine a light on important environmental issues.
Katrina Kuh, Haub Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law, Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University, said: ‘So many factors will determine how successfully a nation will be able to implement any of the recommendations included in the report. So many factors could impede change, including war or endemic poverty. And, with climate change itself being a destabilizing force, it could hamper the implementation of adaptation policy as attention is diverted towards dealing with its immediate effects.
History Professor Joseph Tse-hei writes in the Taipei Times about the troubles facing Hong Kong’s new chief executive.
Haub Law Dean Horace Anderson writes in Law.com about easing limits on remote learning.
Pace University Professor Emily Gold Waldman, who teaches constitutional law, joins News 12 via ZOOM to discuss the ramifications of overturning Roe V. Wade.
As debates continue about how to solve the student loan crisis in our country, one federal program with significant benefits doesn’t get enough attention. The Public Service Loan Forgiveness Program was created in 2007 to help federal student loan borrowers who choose to go into nonprofit or governmental careers, which typically pay less than jobs in the for-profit sector.
Haub Law’s Bennett Gershman provides insights to The Daily Freeman about whether a certain murder case can be retried.
Adam G. Klein, associate professor of communication studies at Pace University's New York City campus, said it's important to realize that Ukrainian soldiers and citizens are fighting a Russian military eight times larger
Adam G. Klein, associate professor of communication studies at Pace University’s New York City campus, said it’s important to realize that Ukrainian soldiers and citizens are fighting a Russian military eight times larger.