News

Browse these titles for everything from parenting advice to the life of a Hollywood pioneer and the stories of refugees in America.

Isabel Huacuja Alonso’s “Radio for the Millions” traces the vitality of the medium in South Asia during the 20th century.

New York was one of several cities that allocated more public spaces for physical activity and recreation during the pandemic. 

A device that uses ultrasound to calm nerves in kidneys may be able to help some people get their blood pressure under control.

Columbia's astronomers, legal scholars, and musicians had a busy month in February. Test your knowledge of the latest news stories across the university!

Postdoc Oliver Philcox may have found a “smoking gun” for new frontiers in physics.

Black Lives in the Diaspora: Past / Present / Future aims to publish more robustly in Black studies.

Leading experts from SIPA weighed in on the ensuing war, what lies ahead, and the impact of the conflict on the two nations and the world.

Researchers have developed a highly accurate machine learning model for detecting dementia in older drivers.

Feeling preoccupied with your fitness regimen could be a warning sign of exercise addiction.

Two new papers offer striking and surprising insights into the often-studied galaxy OJ 287.

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

Apple TV launched "The Matter of Black Lives," a three-part series featuring films and commentary by Columbia Journalism School's Jelani Cobb.

A professor discusses why early puberty is becoming more common and why it's a concern.  

Philip Kitcher’s volume is one of the first in a new series put out by Columbia University Press that celebrates the Core’s centennial.