News
- The $400,000 award recognizes the far-reaching medical impact of Caruthers’ development, in the early 1980s, of an efficient and fast method to synthesize nucleic acids.
- The award is given to students for academic achievement and service; it is considered one of the College of Arts & Sciences’ highest honors.
- CU Boulder Ecology and Evolutionary Biology scientist Katharine Suding is leading ongoing research in partnership with City of Boulder Open Space.
- A recently published paper co-authored by CU Boulder’s Fernando Villanea offers new insights into what happened to the populations of Central Mexico a millennium ago.
- The biochemistry assistant professor is investigating how inflammatory proteins called NLRs establish the first line of defense against viral infection in bacteria and humans.
- The awards are part of $1.88 million in 2023 biomedical research grant funding for Colorado researchers.
- How PhD student Brigid Mark joined the fight for environmental justice after spending four years battling a pipeline that she says taints clean water, worsens climate change and erodes native treaty rights.
- Chosen by a faculty committee, the recipients of ASCEND Awards were recognized for their efforts to promote diversity and inclusion.
- Todd J. Zywicki, George Mason ³Ô¹ÏÍø Foundation Professor of Law at the George Mason ³Ô¹ÏÍø Antonin Scalia School of Law, will join the Bruce D. Benson Center for the Study of Western Civilization at the ³Ô¹ÏÍø of Colorado Boulder as the Visiting Scholar in Conservative Thought and Policy for fall 2023.Â
- In the book ‘The Wild and the Wicked,’ Benjamin Hale argues that because people have the unique capacity to care for the environment, they have a moral obligation to do so.