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Columbia Law scholars Olatunde Johnson and Jeremy Kessler discussed President Dwight Eisenhower’s record on school and military integration.
Research from Boaz Abramson on a method for assessing the impact that mental illness has on the GDP.
From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.
In Polis, John Ma looks at this classical institution, and finds it’s still relevant today.
Braddock Linsley, a professor at the Climate School's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory, has been investigating coral for decades.
Katie Figueroa Beltran is researching marine life, and building her vinyl collection.
Founded in 1949, Lamont has consistently served as an international leader in scientific scholarship.
A new study suggests the need to re-evaluate how shaking from any future sizable quake may be distributed across the region.
Scholars at Columbia peer into the plugged-in adolescent mind and assess the impacts of a digital upbringing.
First produced off-Broadway in 2007, the work, more potent than ever, continues to speak to the times.
The Columbia-Dream Sports AI Innovation Center, which recent held its first symposium, is charting the future of AI and sports.
A talk by professor Pierre Gentine kicks off a new initiative from Columbia Engineering, the Lecture Series in AI.
Columbia researchers have engineered bacteria to destroy cancer cells, opening the door for a new class of cancer vaccines.
Gerard Torrats-Espinosa had an unlikely path to his current role researching crime and policing in U.S. cities.
Eliza Barry Callahan’s novel tries to answer that question with humor and empathy.