Research
- Sociology graduate student has won a grant from the American Sociological Association for her work with housing recovery among Houston-area immigrants.
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ research suggests how Maasai in Tanzania use their phones shows us how technology, error and openess can bring diverse people together.
- With the help of a new scholar, the Center for Asian Studies aims to launch a program that looks to educate students about this politically fraught region.
- Senior Instructor Raichle Farrelly selected by U.S. Department of State for English Language Specialist Project.
- Warming temperatures are causing plants across alpine and arctic environments to stay green longer and reproduce earlier, scientists find.
- Maisam Alomar, assistant professor of women and gender studies, wins support to study race and gender inequality in medical rehabilitation.
- Anti-racism I and II are available free of charge to any CU Â鶹ӰԺ student or employee through Coursera.
- Record-breaking fires over the past decade suggest the western U.S. has entered a new era of megafires.Fire itself is not the problem – it has been characteristic of the North American West for millennia. The problem is when fires, fueled by dry and
- Climate change and other environmental stresses have increasingly become drivers of displacement,Climate change is upending people’s lives around the world, but when droughts, floods or sea level rise force them to leave their countries, people
- CU Â鶹ӰԺ mathematicians created a novel mathematical model and found that a mixture of repayment strategies might be best—depending on how much is borrowed and how much income the borrower has.