A recently published paper co-authored by CU Boulderâs Fernando Villanea offers new insights into what happened to the populations of Central Mexico a millennium ago.
In the book âThe Wild and the Wicked,â philosophy professor Benjamin Hale argues that because people have the unique capacity to care for the environment, they have a moral obligation to do so.
Just north of Nederland, about 26 miles from Boulder, is CU Boulderâs Mountain Research Station. It is the universityâs highest research facility and is home to some of the worldâs longest-running alpine research on everything from how trees respond to increasing wildfires to charismatic little pikas and more.
CU Boulder alumna and businesswoman Nancy Fisher Wilhelms shares her secrets for a successful, fulfilling career with her book, âYes! You Can Do It! The Young Womanâs Guide to Starting a Fulfilling Career.â
Karen Bailey will present her work on the fraught relationship between elephant and human communities in Thailand when she receives her award at the Ecological Society of America annual meeting.
Colorado Shakespeare Festival staffers shared the Shakespeare & Violence Prevention program with scholars and practitioners in England, including at Shakespeareâs Globe theater.
A CU Boulder faculty member has been recognized with a national excellence in teaching award from a leading group for professional, continuing and online education.
While itâs popular, June Gruberâs teaching, which recently won a Cogswell Award for Inspirational Instruction, doesnât show students the path to unmitigated joy; on the contrary, the science of emotional wellness is more nuanced.
Lipari-DiLeonardo, a graduate student in applied mathematics and atmospheric science, has been named a Rudd Mayer Fellow by the Women of Renewable Industries and Sustainable Energy organization.