Honoris Causa

Harvard’s 2022 honorary-degree recipients

Urbanist William Julius Wilson and the ever-activist Gloria Steinem

Photograph by Jim Harrison

Four women and three men received honorary degrees during the graduation program on May 26 (including one in absentia, because he is engaged in humanitarian relief efforts in Ukraine). Provost Alan M. Garber introduced the honorands in the following order, and President Lawrence S. Bacow read the citations. Read more about each at harvardmag.com/honorands-22.


The masked Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum
Photograph by Jim Harrison

Jean-Jacques Muyembe-Tamfum, microbiologist, general director of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Institut National pour la Recherche Biomédicale and president of the Congolese Academy of Science, a discoverer of the Ebola virus. Doctor of Science. Formidable in fighting a fearsome virus, resolute in pursuit of treatments and cures; from rainforests to research labs, in clinics and councils, his mind, heart, and voice have saved precious lives.

Vicki L. Ruiz, Distinguished Professor emerita of history and Chicano/Latino studies at the University of California, Irvine, the preeminent historian of Latina Americans. Doctor of Laws. Fabled founding mother of Latina studies, weaving spirit threads of memory into tapestries of tenacity; she draws stories of food workers, field hands, and flappers from out of the shadows and into the light.

Martha C. Nussbaum, JF ’74, Ph.D. ’75, RI ’81, a polymathic philosopher and widely known public intellectual, the University of Chicago’s Ernst Freund Distinguished Service Professor of law and ethics. Doctor of Laws. Ethicist, classicist, humanist, prolific, polymathic, profound; a worldly-wise scholar of capacious capabilities who illuminates our thinking on how one should live.

William Julius Wilson, Geyser University Professor emeritus, a sociologist who has explored the intersection of race and poverty, transforming public policy. Doctor of Laws. Casting light on the plight of the truly disadvantaged, discerning what happens when work disappears, a deep and dauntless scholar whose ideas enlighten policy, envisaging a bridge over the racial divide.

Gloria Steinem, feminist writer and political activist, cofounder of Ms. magazine, and of the National Women’s Political Caucus, the Women’s Action Alliance, Take Our Daughters to Work Day, the Women’s Media Center, and Voters for Choice. Doctor of Humane Letters. Iconic champion of women’s rights, serial entrepreneur of social change, whose ardent organizing and potent prose have engendered historic strides toward equality for all.

José Andrés, chef, restaurateur, food entrepreneur, and founder of World Central Kitchen, which provides humanitarian relief during natural and manmade disasters, including the current invasion of Ukraine. Doctor of Humane Letters. A Michelin man who never tires; a Picasso of paella whose tapas are tops; with plates of hope for people in need he taps food’s power to serve the world.

The Right Honourable Jacinda Ardern, prime minister of New Zealand and the guest speaker. Doctor of Laws. Her leadership style sends a powerful message: it’s key we be both strong and kind; inclusive and empathic, hopeful and pragmatic, she guides a proud nation with new zeal and vision.

Related topics

You might also like

Harvard Commencement 2025

Harvard passes a test of its values, yet challenges loom.

Alumni Cheer on Harvard

At Alumni Day, ringing endorsements of Harvard’s fight

Paula Johnson at Harvard Medical School Convocation

Amid distrust of science, Paula Johnson tells medical and dental graduates to be “citizen-physicians.”

Most popular

Harvard Research Funding Cuts Are Illegal, Judge Rules

The Trump administration violated the University’s First Amendment rights and must restore all funding, the court said.

Jodie Foster Honored at Radcliffe Day 2025

The actress and director discussed her film career and her transformative time at Yale.

How MAGA Went Mainstream at Harvard

Trump, TikTok, and the pandemic are reshaping Gen Z politics.

Explore More From Current Issue

Two women in traditional kimonos, one lighting a cigarette, in a scene from Apart from You.

Harvard Film Archive Spotlights Japanese Director Mikio Naruse

A retrospective of the filmmaker’s works, from Floating Clouds to Flowing

Man, standing in small group of people outside the courthouse, holding a sign that reads "HANDS OFF HARVARD" in red letters

Harvard’s Summer in Court

What Columbia’s settlement means for the University

James Muller in white lab coat leaning on railing in hospital hallway.

Free Speech, the Bomb—and Donald Trump

A Harvard cardiologist on the unlikely alliances that shaped a global movement to prevent nuclear war