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In an event honoring the life of the late director of the Santiago Center, Karen Poniachik, participants highlight the special global bond between Chile and the University.
A senior attorney at the Knight Institute explains why they filed the lawsuit and what's at stake for free speech.
The program supports new collaborations with the goal of developing interdisciplinary relationships among Columbia faculty.
The Great Polarization lays out the issue in stark terms, and outlines potential ways forward.
Test your knowledge of the past month's news and events at Columbia with questions on the University's next president, Oscar nominations, and much more.
Store shelves are loaded with beauty and hygiene products containing seriously harmful chemicals.
Their new method extracts high-quality information from small amounts of frozen tumor tissue.
Supplements have no proven benefit for healthy people who have even a remotely balanced diet.
The rainforest has been degraded by a much greater extent than scientists had previously believed.
28.6% of students with asthma reported bullying victimization due to their asthma.
A nerve stimulation therapy is showing promise in animal studies and may eventually help people.
How did the political situation in Peru escalate to violence? A political scientist unpacks why the country is in turmoil today.
Indira Turney, an associate research scientist at the Columbia University Irving Medical Center, is studying how brains age in diverse populations.
Columbia neuroscientists identify a mechanism in the brain that tags information with emotional associations for enhanced memory.
From science to engineering, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.