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Find coverage of Northeastern University in the press.
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Attack may have been first mass shooting with an automatic weapon

“I just don’t know of any other case where the perpetrator used an automatic rifle,” said Jack Levin, professor emeritus at Northeastern University, who has co-authored several books on the rise in mass shootings, which he traces to the late 1960s and early 1970s.
The Boston Globe logo.

Don’t give up on building with wood

“Wood is one of our best, most environmentally friendly resources,’’ said Peter Weiderspahn, who teaches courses in building technology at Northeastern University’s School of Architecture. “It’s the only truly renewable building material we have.” Weiderspahn notes that most wood used in the United States is produced domestically, it is lighter and thus requires less energy […]
Vox

Is Las Vegas the worst mass shooting in US history? It’s surprisingly complicated

For example, the Gun Violence Archive and Vox count any event in which four or more people were shot, but not necessarily killed, at the same general time and location. Some criminologists, such as Northeastern University professor James Alan Fox, prefer to include any shooting in which four more people are killed. Mother Jones editor […]
USA Today Logo

No, the Las Vegas attack wasn’t a ‘new normal’

What is horribly normal are the dozens killed by guns every day in far less spectacular ways, writes Northeastern professor James Alan Fox.
Vox

Puerto Rico hasn’t updated the Hurricane Maria death toll in 5 days

Other experts agree: We’re going to have to wait a while for communications to be restored to find out how many are dead. “Sadly the island is so badly damaged that there is no ability to communicate — no way to know the number of people who may have been killed in the storm itself […]
Boston Magazine

Why are Boston’s nurses so damn angry?

Neither the local healthcare industry nor its hospitals can afford the bad PR that might result from another nursing strike. “We’re moving into the age of hyper-competition among hospitals,” says Timothy Hoff, a professor of management, healthcare systems, and healthcare policy at Northeastern University, “and the Boston hospitals are not immune from that.”
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How many crime-linked guns are there in Boston?

“We’re finding more and more that in a restrictive state like Massachusetts, it’s harder to come by guns,” said Jack McDevitt, a Northeastern University criminologist. “Guns are being shared by gangs or groups of youth . . . that’s huge intelligence. You can start to put a case together.”

Islamic style is showing up on catwalks, in mainstream stores, and on non-Muslim women

For most of the years of Elizabeth Bucar’s research, the fashion world barely noticed Muslim style and the style makers I studied. But now, the Northeastern professor sees pious fashion showing up on catwalks, in department stores and on non-Muslim women.
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Trump called San Juan’s mayor a weak leader. Here’s what her leadership looks like

But that is a far cry from being a tool of Democrats, said Amilcar Barreto, a Puerto Rican political expert at Northeastern University. “Complaining about people on the island not having food, electricity, water is not partisan. That’s just basic human necessity.”
Newsweek logo

Puerto Rico’s death toll could rise as vulnerable residents struggle to get water, gas, and basic care: Expert

“Sadly, the island is so badly damaged that there is no ability to communicate—no way to know the number of people who may have been killed in the storm itself with houses coming down, debris,” Stephen E. Flynn, the founding director of the Global Resilience Institute at Northeastern University, tells Newsweek.
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What would Boston look like if Amazon’s 50,000-job HQ came here?

“It would be a major transformation,” said Barry Bluestone, a professor of public policy at Northeastern University and senior fellow at the Boston Foundation. “We’re talking about something that’s totally out of scale [from] anything we’ve ever seen.”
The Christian Science Monitor

Behind the ‘paradox of fear’: Crime is down, but many Americans don’t feel safe

“The reason people so easily embrace this idea that things are bad out there … is because there is a level of discord. If we were all getting along and not distrusting our neighbor, we wouldn’t be so easily persuaded by a short-term spike in crime into thinking that the sky is falling,” says Northeastern […]