News

The project is supported by an NSF Convergence Accelerator award that funds team-based, multidisciplinary initiatives addressing challenges of national importance. 

In her new book, Bombay Hustle, Professor Debashree Mukherjee tells the story of the rise of the Indian film industry.

Meet two of the more than 1,400 students, representing 80 universities worldwide, who are deeply committed to social impact, sustainable development, and climate change. 

The pandemic, the presidential election, globalization, climate change, and other issues are covered in a transatlantic forum.

The University will routinely monitor sewage leaving student dormitories to head off outbreaks of COVID-19.

We should focus on ads and news coverage about what each candidate would do if elected.

COVID-19 has shown that coordinating efforts across all aspects of science are vital to the success of our fight against this infectious disease.

In "Comics, Health, and Embodiment," Professor Rachel Adams teaches students that the medium’s combination of words and pictures is particularly adept at depicting illness.

If the government won’t regulate funding and source disclosures, then tech companies should volunteer the information.

She comes to the University after 13 years at Carnegie Corporation of New York, where she served, most recently, as Vice President and Chief Investment Officer.

A unified classification of diverse cell types proposed by a Columbia-led team could shed light on how our brains are wired.

Three University researchers have joined a $115 million DOE-funded center that will pioneer quantum technologies that could benefit national security, pharmaceutical development, and more.

Three University researchers have joined a $115 million DOE-funded center that will pioneer quantum technologies that could benefit national security, pharmaceutical development, and more.

When we embrace our roles as the storytellers of COVID inequities and racial Injustice, we can create a cultural awakening and begin to heal.

A summer fellowship program, in conjunction with the Columbia-Harlem Small Business Development Center, was a win-win for MBAs and the community.