News Archive

After the pitcher’s mound, Mo’ne Davis makes the most of her time at Columbia’s School of Professional Studies.

Timely guidance can empower patients to advocate for their health throughout life, according to new Columbia research.

The collaboration between Columbia University’s Bundles Scholars and Incite will create enhanced funding, mentorship, skill-building, and networking opportunities for program participants.

This week, 140 medical students at Vagelos College of Physicians and Surgeons received the results of their residency match.

Courtney Jimenez, a psychology PhD student, is building experiments that explore how social our time spent alone is.

Business School research reveals that economic hardships experienced in formative years can impact attitudes toward immigration and government redistribution later in life.

We will not tolerate unauthorized disruptions or harassing behavior at admitted student events. I ask you to join me in welcoming our new students in a spirit of civility and kindness.

Columbia stem cell scientists have a new theory.

After graduating from Columbia in May, she’ll head to Oxford University to pursue a degree in intellectual history.

Carla Hoge has been investigating the strange behavior of the protein PRDM9 since joining Columbia six years ago.

In Splinters, her first memoir, Leslie Jamison explores her divorce and the birth of her daughter.

The Initiative will be centered around four main pillars: women's economic opportunity, women's health, women's safety and security, and women's leadership, democracy, and human rights. 

By measuring the direction that a person’s brain waves move, we may be able to predict their behavior.

Ramin Bahrani discusses If Dreams Were Lightning with Wafaa El-Sadr.

Starting with the sale of a single bouquet from Isadore Gilbert Mudge’s garden in 1942, Columbia Community Service, largely run by women over the past 82 years, has raised millions of dollars in support of nonprofits serving Harlem and Morningside Heights.