Pace Now
Pace Now
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Press ReleaseJune 26, 2024
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Pace News
Latest News
How will ChatGPT and the emergence of AI language models change learning and higher education? Our faculty weighs in.
The Animal Advocacy Clinic is one of the most unique courses Pace has to offer; enabling undergraduates the incredibly rare experience to lobby in Albany for bills aimed at animal protection.
Retired special investigative agent Damian M. Salvati’s ethos of ethics and teamwork in his government career grew out of his days as a Dyson journalism major.
Professor Bridget Crawford has been a professor at Haub Law since 2003 and was named a University Distinguished Professor in 2021, which is the highest honor the University can bestow upon a faculty member. Prior to joining the Haub Law faculty, she was a practicing attorney at Milbank LLP, where she specialized in taxation and estate planning. At Haub Law, Professor Crawford teaches Federal Income Taxation; Estate and Gift Taxation; Wills, Trusts and Estates; Tax Policy; Corporations & Partnerships; and Feminist Legal Theory. Professor Crawford is a leading authority on taxation, as well as feminist legal theory, and menstrual equity. A favorite in the classroom, she has also been honored multiple times by graduating students at Haub Law as Outstanding Professor of the Year, as well as recognized by her colleagues with Haub Law’s Faculty Award for Excellence in Teaching.
Second Annual Pace Access to Justice Workshop Spotlights the Important Issues Surrounding Voting Access, Elections, and Democracy.
In Fall 2023, Pace will open its newest building, 15 Beekman, a 26-story mixed use vertical learning hub on the corner of Beekman and Nassau streets on our New York City Campus.
U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor discusses her memoir, her storied career, and offers advice to international students in a memorable classroom visit.
Last year, Pace University enjoyed having two roof-covered stadiums, using both Ashe and Armstrong alternately throughout the day for different graduation ceremonies from the university's colleges.
Dyson Professor Joseph Tse-Hei Lee writes an editorial in Taipei Times about president of the Republic of China, Tsai Ing-wen embracing diplomatic activism.
To counter that, "She must avoid and denounce the class and cultural privileges (her fame) this visibility evokes in her legal defense," says Melvin Williams, associate professor of communication and media studies at Pace University.