Pace Now
Pace Now
Pace News
Latest News
Know of someone who embodies the spirit of Pace? Has a can-do attitude and gives back to their community through volunteerism and advocacy work? If so, we want to hear from you! Nominations for the 2022 Opportunitas in Action Award are due December 3.
“Sanitation Celebration” is a Pace University Gallery exhibit of painting, video, sculpture, and photography by 21 Department of Sanitation (DSNY) workers, plus the department’s artists-in-residence, Mierle Laderman Ukeles and sTo Len. The show opened on Nov. 14 and continues to Jan. 28.
Instructors from Pace University’s Dyson College of Arts and Sciences recently received a $499,354 grant from the National Science Foundation that will allow them to expand the teaching of data science skills into introductory biology and environmental science courses.
Dyson students took their coursework beyond the classroom walls, tackling real-world issues and presenting to global policymakers.
Professor Bennett Gershwin and Ellen Yaroshefsky's article in the New York Law Journal examines why prosecutors, the most powerful public officials in America, are rarely sanctioned when they break the rules citing the impact of Judiciary Law §90(10).
Professor John Bandler provides expert advice on how to protect businesses from the threat of ransomware, a top cybercrime, in this article in the Westchester and Fairfield Business Journal.
After a long hiatus, and with precautions still in place, live performances have returned to New York – and Pace Performing Arts students and alumni involved in ground-breaking on-campus productions and “spectacular” off-campus shows are rejoicing.
“Pace allowed me the space and grace to form my own distinct value system, while expanding my knowledge of scholarly political theories and feminist texts to prepare me for my career.”
On September 1, 2021 the American Nurses' Association called for the Department of Health and Human Services to declare a national nurse staffing crisis. Nurses provide 90% of all care to patients in hospitals. Images from the pandemic brought the work of nurses into the spotlight – nurses were rightly deemed heroes – and in fact, they and other healthcare providers worked at great risk to their own health and that of their families.
Professor Erika George delivered the Annual Lloyd K. Garrison Lecture on Environmental Law on Monday, November 15, on "Incorporating Human Rights: Corporate Responsibility, Equity, and Just Environments."