News Archive

Researchers have drawn up a newly granular map of the inputs and impacts of human sewage on the world’s coastlines. The results are not pretty, but they are enlightening.

The program will allow early-stage startups to conduct product-oriented research and development in available campus labs, accelerating innovation in critical areas such as climate, energy, infrastructure, and materials.

She also covers changing U.S.-China relations, fear, truth-telling, and other topics in an online Weatherhead East Asian Institute event.

Program will help researchers and entrepreneurs develop and scale carbon-cutting technologies.

Aerosol scientist Faye McNeill explains air purifier basics, why masks really do work, and how chemistry experiments and computer simulations in the lab translate to environmental policy.

Drew and Goggin are graduates of Columbia College and Columbia Journalism School.

Here are the Awards & Milestones that went to Columbians from Oct. 28 to Nov. 11, 2021.

In “Read Until You Understand,” Professor Farah Jasmine Griffin sets her personal story against the changing definition of American democracy.

Content advisory: This article includes information about mental health distress, suicide, and suicide prevention. 

In a complementary measure, landfills should also be outfitted with facilities to monitor and control existing methane emissions.

A group of artists gathered to share their experiences creating works that encompass collective memories and mourning as well as hope and healing.

The pendulum versus policy explanation, and how they differ in their implications.

In Information Security Essentials, Susan McGregor explains how to protect news writers, sources, and organizations in the digital era.

Technical support and a strong interdisciplinary ethos have contributed to a thriving entrepreneurial culture on campus.

Ahead of Veterans Day, a break down of why the transition from the military to higher ed is so difficult and what can be done about it.