D'Amore-McKim faculty member receives Fulbright
As part of his semester in Canada, Anand Nair plans to develop and test an AI-enabled remote patient monitoring system.
As part of his semester in Canada, Anand Nair plans to develop and test an AI-enabled remote patient monitoring system.
From high-stakes co-ops in New York and consulting to a full-time offer at J.P. Morgan, Jaberi's trajectory reflects a student who has consistently leaned into challenge and responsibility.
For Nada Sanders, the most important breakthroughs have rarely come from perfect data or elegant models. They have come from friction — from the moment when theory fails, when numbers resist, and when human behavior refuses to fit neatly into equations. It is in that tension that she has built her career, not by forcing the world to match the model, but by reshaping the model to reflect the world as it is.
On Tuesday, April 7, D'Amore-McKim School of Business professors Valentina Marano, Ravi Ramamurti, and Gary Young convened academic and industry leaders for a panel discussion on the partnership models driving innovation across the global life-sciences ecosystem.
The position comes after years of excellence in scholarship and service to the preeminent group for accounting academics.
Bhatia will be joining Morgan Stanley as an investment banker after graduation.
Inspired by a D'Amore-McKim professor, Asprelli started a non-profit to donate beauty products to women in need.
Fossil fuel companies want you to think they're leaders in renewables — researchers say their communication strategy suggests otherwise.
Recent market fluctuations beg questions about whether the market is entering another cycle of volatility driven by geopolitical shocks.
The order isn't of immediate concern, but there could be long-term consequences, since routers used in the U.S. are primarily foreign-made, expert say.
New research finds that businesses respond to tax incentives in ways that vary widely depending on a country's tax system and economic structure.
“What I've learned is that pursuing my master's degree and competing as a D1 track and field athlete have made me more organized, resilient, and intentional. Doing one or the other wouldn't challenge me in the same way. Balancing both forces me to level up.” – Ryan Slaney, MS in Finance'26