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The New Jersey Institute for Food, Nutrition, and Health has been awarded a $3 million, three-year grant by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation to launch the New Jersey Healthy Kids Initiative, a partnership between IFNH and the Child Health Institute of New Jersey that will focus on improving the health of New Jersey children.

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Shaheena Shahid has tutored orphans in Peru, India and Jordan, taught English to Palestinian refugees in Lebanon and instructed young Moroccan girls on self-defense techniques. Meet the Graduate School of Education student who is committed to elevating human rights for underserved communities around the world.

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Bioblitz, a citizen science project, is aimed at getting people to learn more about life around them, to collect species data for scientists and to promote conservation in an era of rampant habitat destruction. Anyone with a connection to Rutgers can participate. Just download the app!

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A Rutgers program developed to combat the soaring cost of textbooks has saved more than 11,000 students $2.1 million since its inception and continues to grow. The Open and Affordable Textbooks program recently provided 28 awards to faculty members and instructors in Camden, Newark and New Brunswick and Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences who found ways to offer students free or low-cost textbooks as an alternative

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On Feb. 26, the U.S. Supreme Court will hear oral arguments in a case that could decide whether unions may continue to charge mandatory “agency fees” to all public employees. Adrienne Eaton, interim dean and professor in the Rutgers School of Management and Labor Relations, explains why this case matters in our Q&A.

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How do you begin debates on difficult topics including issues related to public health? An exhibit of work produced by visual arts undergraduate students in the Mason Gross School of the Arts – in collaboration with Rutgers School of Public Health – aims to open the door. Watch our video to hear Perry N. Halkitis, dean of the School of Public Health, talk about the role art can play in to start those challenging conversations and read our story for more on the exhibit.

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During World War II, 2,500 Japanese Americans, deemed a threat to national security and incarcerated because of their race, came to a small town in South Jersey for a chance at freedom. Their story, a little-known chapter in the state's history, has been brought to light by students at Rutgers University-New Brunswick as part of a national traveling exhibit on display at the Douglass library. 

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Rutgers is joining New Jersey’s prison system to address an often-overlooked contributor to the cycle of crime, poverty and health concerns: the prevalence of drug and alcohol addiction among the state’s nearly 20,000 incarcerated adults. The Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care program provides nearly 900 correction officers and management staff with new skills and information needed to encourage inmates’ successful engagement with substance use disorder treatment.