Not Your Parents’ Politics, by Ioana Literat and Neta Kligler-Vilenchik, explores this question from various angles.
Precious D. Benally ’13 and Eldred D. Lesansee ’25 discuss bringing Native American law into focus at Columbia Law School and ...
Columbia College senior Simmi Chan is a standout on the University Women’s Squash Team: As a sophomore, she became the first ...
Kevin Sakal Ith discusses what brought him to Columbia after years in the Bay Area and a stint in Azerbaijan.
Building the Worlds That Kill Us shows how social, political, and economic order in the U.S. has always favored some, at the ...
This is a monthly group for anyone with a primary brain tumor. Patients are invited to share their honest thoughts and feelings related to living life with a brain tumor. Discussion topics have ...
This page highlights the astonishing amount of scientific discovery happening at Columbia, one of the world’s leading research universities.
Across American history, the question of whose lives are long and healthy and whose lives are short and sick has always been shaped by the social and economic order. From the dispossession of ...
Yaniv Yatziv has found that studying at Columbia Business School takes energy and concentration, so he starts his day with exercise. "It helps me build momentum that carries through the rest of the ...
The Journal of International Affairs' podcast series takes you beyond the headlines into long-lasting issues that will shape the 21st century order. Beyond Beauty: Global South Diasporic Women Artists ...