News
- As women gain more power in national legislatures around the world, they may drive major changes in how their countries spend money. But the relationship is complicated, researchers say.
- Average temperatures in high altitude areas have risen twice as fast as the global average, causing more river runoff and sediment flux, and the trend could get worse, scientists find.
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ sociologists who teach courses on the sociology of horror talk about their podcast, why horror films are popular and their favorite scary movies.
- New Book on W.E.B Du Bois explores the contribution the scholar had on the origins and evolution of intersectionality.
- The DOE award will help accelerate research into flow batteries, which will help make the electricity grid more reliable and sustainable.
- China's Chang'e 5 mission landed in a region of the moon more than 850 miles from the nearest Apollo landing site. The rocks the mission collected are raising questions about how lava flowed across the lunar surface 2 billion years ago.
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ staffer and alum embraces avocation as a writer in later life.
- Through a survey and ‘living document,’ a trailblazing STEM lab group hopes to make all members feel that they belong and are valued.
- Screen time may not be as harmful as previously suspected for school-aged children and may have some important benefits, according to one of the largest studies to date exlporing how screens impact youth.
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ experts provide an update on the status of the delta variant in the United States, takeaways from the latest data on vaccines and breakthrough COVID-19 cases, and how the campus is approaching its sustainable response to the pandemic.