You are here:
News
Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, director of Columbia's National Center for Disaster Preparedness, discusses the path forward.
Student Veterans of America recognized the Center for Veteran Transition and Integration with the William Pearson Tolley Champion for Veterans in Higher Education Award.
The findings suggest that blood pressure monitoring and treatment may need to continue for longer after birth.
Alexis Abramson says the Climate School is in a unique position to tackle the climate crisis.
The discovery could disrupt technologies like robotics, medicine, and space travel.
Building the Worlds That Kill Us shows how social, political, and economic order in the U.S. has always favored some, at the expense of others.
President Biden gave the SIPA professor and former secretary of state the nation’s highest civilian honor at a January 4 White House ceremony.
Doctoral candidate Anna Vannucci’s new research uses AI to predict kids’ mental health outcomes.
Test your knowledge of 2024 at the University with questions on Olympic medalists, our new president, cutting edge research at Columbia, and much more.
Joseph Albernaz’s Common Measures revisits the lives of such writers as William Blake and the Wordsworths.
Even though he died in 1987, Baldwin's words continue to inspire and to remain as relevant as ever.
Education, nutrition and sanitation have likely played a key role in the improvements.
Smiling robots, nanoplastics, electric fish, and an archaeological dig in Peru were some of the biggest news stories of the year.
Columbia and NASA signed a “collaborative Space Act Agreement” to jointly advance research and education opportunities.
The film won the Audience Award for Best Documentary Short Film at the festival.