News

From science to engineering, writing to philosophy, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.

Columbia climate scientists led a project to provide officials, organizations, and families with tools to plan for the worst.

The academy honors excellence across a wide range of fields, including academia, business, public affairs, and the arts.

Fiction, nonfiction, memoir, history, sports, essays—we’ve got you covered with this diverse list of 11 books.

In Binnie Kirshenbaum’s Counting Backwards, a wife must face a future without her beloved partner.

Mehtaab Sawhney, who joined Columbia last year, enjoys the thorny work of proving a seemingly straightforward statement of fact.

New Columbia research found that people’s brain activity varies more when viewing abstract art than representational art.

The prestigious prize will enable them to pursue independent projects of their choice.

New observations upended scientists' standing hypothesis about how a star would engulf a planet, causing its demise.

Claudio Lomnitz’s work on disappearance dates back to 2019, and the lab is expanding his efforts.

Construction for graduation ceremonies on Morningside's Low Plaza near Alma Mater starts on April 21. Here are some great alternative spots for your graduation photos! 

Here are some suggestions for what to do with your family when they visit New York City for Commencement.

The event explored how data ascience is being used in health care, infrastructure, energy, media, and beyond.

The unique construction that makes plastic so useful also makes it prone to forming hazardous micro- and nanoscopic shards.

Can a disaster zone become a model for resilient urban development? Columbia Global thinks so.