Find the latest media coverage of Bentley stories at newsroom.bentley.edu.
“The thing with [NFL quarterback Tim] Tebow is that he seems more genuinely religious than most athletes, who seem to be religious to win games.”
Clifford Putney, Assistant Professor of History and author of Muscular Christianity: Manhood and Sports in Protestant America, 1880-1920
Associated Press, January 8, 2012
“But what is lesser known is how the effects of these environmental catastrophes—whether sudden or slow-moving—are disproportionately borne by women. Disaster is seldom gender-neutral.”
Joni Seager, Professor of Global Studies
TheDailyBeast.com, November 4, 2011
“The more Meetups people attended, the greater their likelihood to tell other people to learn about, volunteer for and, ultimately, vote for their candidate.”
Research conducted by Christine Williams, Professor of Government, and Bruce Weinberg, Associate Professor of Marketing
CNN.com, November 7, 2011
“The United States is desperate for an energy policy that does not feature shale gas, coal or tar sands as an alternative to dwindling petroleum reserves.”
Letter to the Editor by P. Thompson Davis, Rick Alan Oches and David Szymanski, Professors of Geology
The Boston Globe, October 31, 2011
[Urging the Fed to use nominal GNP as a target in setting monetary policy] is “something Scott Sumner, an economist at Bentley University whose views have gained prominence through his blog, The Money Illusion, has been pushing for two decades. … perhaps most significant, since it suggests the Fed might actually be open to such an idea, is that Goldman Sachs economists have just endorsed the idea as well.”
The Wall Street Journal, October 27, 2011
“I see more communications jobs, particularly in marketing, centered around technology — and more specifically, data analytics … a ‘marketing technologist.’ There’s tremendous demand and shortage of supply for those who are experts.”
Bruce Weinberg, Associate Professor of Marketing
Boston Business Journal, November 25, 2011
[The makeup and motivation of the Occupy movement] has "confounded analysts, commentators in the press, and academic specialists. … [The protestors] have a very real commitment to not reduce [their cause] to a single plea. There was one handwritten sign that read: ‘We’re not disorganized; it’s just that the U.S. has so many issues.’”
Cyrus Veeser, Associate Professor of History
The Boston Globe, November 15, 2011