News

The world-class science facility at Columbia’s medical campus in Washington Heights will set new standards for sustainability.

Changing only a single letter in the DNA code of selected genes in T-cells may lead to improved cell therapy.

David Scott says that seeking to rectify such historical wrongs must recognize that they lie beyond repair.

Songtao Jia's research on epigenetic inheritance could lead to new cancer treatments. In his spare time, Jia likes to fish.

The three buildings RPBW designed for the Manhattanville campus—Lenfest, the Jerome L. Greene Science Center, and the Forum—are the focus.

Professor Andrea Prat investigates how well Americans can detect false information compared to their ability to recognize true facts, revealing that information inequality is the core issue impacting discernment.

A new study shows a way to rejuvenate old blood stem cells, restoring their ability to regenerate and fight age-related diseases.

NASA has awarded Columbia and partners a prestigious grant to launch a particle detector into Earth’s upper atmosphere.

From science to medicine, writing to social sciences, here are the Columbians who received awards recently.

The 5 grants are for journalists and newsrooms reporting on inequalities and misconduct in the American criminal justice system. 

Hear the winner of the 2024 Botwinick Prize in Business Ethics describe his values-based approach to leadership.

EVs shouldn’t be a luxury item, but Biden’s tariffs mean they may remain so.

Provost Angela Olinto announces award and grant recipients from the Office of the Provost’s award programs, including inaugural Dialogue Across Difference grant recipients, to end the 2023-24 academic year.

New research shows that ferroptosis, a form of cell death, occurs in severe COVID-19 patient lungs. Stopping it improves outcomes.

In Smoother Pebbles, Jonathan Cole traces the development of the sociology of science.