News
- Inaugural group of proposals was ‘universally strong and worthy,’ Dean Glen Krutz notes.
- Despite the Inflation Reduction Act, U.S. progress on climate change remains stuck in a climate conundrum, experts say, hampered by politics, complexity and the scope of the problem.
- The MINT study program uses nature-based social intervention to address and dimmish loneliness with teenage parents and their peers.
- Neuroscientists at CU Â鶹ӰԺ have discovered that a specific type of brain cell could be a key player in making you feel the negative impacts of stress.
- Political scientist Adrian Shin and UCLA colleague find that rising levels of inequality have opposite effects on immigration policies in wealthy vs. developing economies.
- The Research and Innovation Office has announced the 2023 RIO Faculty Fellows cohort, which includes 17 faculty members from departments and research institutes spanning the campus.
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ undergraduate finds documents indicating eugenics sympathy by museum founder T.D.A. Cockerell.
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ researcher finds soda taxes aren’t as regressive as previously feared and do decrease body mass index among non-white youth.
- Protests in Iran have sent shockwaves through the country as thousands across the globe have joined in solidarity. Marie Ranjbar explains the history of women-led protests in Iran, what's different this time and what the global community can do to support women's bodily autonomy there.
- Scientists show how the two factors combined to cause extreme ocean events in Indonesia.