News

Their projects include a monograph about Black life and listening, a biography of Stuart Hall, and a book about early American civic architecture.

SIPA kicked off its Spotlight Interview series on April 3, with a wide range of issues including the state of U.S. democracy, Facebook, AI, algorithms, and advancing women’s rights at home and around the world. 

The findings expand on a smaller study that assessed the development of babies born during the first wave of the pandemic.

Enjoy the outdoors—or not—with these opportunities to give back to the Harlem and Morningside Heights communities.

As we look ahead to President Lee C. Bollinger’s last Commencement as president on May 17, here are some highlights from the last 20 years.

May 17 marks Columbia's largest celebration of the Class of 2023, here are six things graduates and their guests should know.

Journalism School Professor David Hajdu examines key moments of urban history in a song cycle.

Katori Hall, Joyce Ladner, Jonathan Lavine, Jeannie Lavine, Tania León, Minouche Shafik, Bob Woodward, and Shing-Tung Yau will be honored.

Boyce was instrumental in leading the university through a series of transformational achievements and challenges.

Columbia is teaming up with other colleges and universities to help students from small-town and rural America enroll in, succeed at, and graduate from the undergraduate program of their choice.

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

The research supports the idea that Alzheimer's is caused by the accumulation of beta-amyloid proteins in the brain.

It will be the first ever research-to-practice center devoted to optimal health for both parents-to-be and the developing infant.

The new site will join the network of centers across Africa, Asia, Europe, and South America.

Columbia's chefs, social workers, and climate scientists had a busy month in March. Test your knowledge of the latest news stories across the university!