Deborah Reed-Danahay examines a population shift in which people move from one socially and economically well-off country to a similar one.
The Santa Barbara Museum of Natural History hosted its Leadership Circles of Giving Dinner on Thursday, January 16 in ...
The Beloit-based Roy Chapman Andrews Society honors a UW-Madison paleoanthropologist. The society is dedicated to promoting ...
The UAB Research Ethics Committee has compiled its history and that of research ethics evaluation in a volume published by the University's ...
In her book, anthropology professor Lisa Lucero's book explores how the Maya survived for thousands of years by building their societies on a ...
Santiago, director of the Rutgers Center for Latin American Studies (CLAS) and professor in the Departments of History and ...
January saw plenty of big releases, from new Freida McFadden to Rebecca Yarros' romantasy title "Onyx Storm" to "More or Less ...
In biology, ecosystems are governed by cycles: predator and prey, bloom and collapse. These cycles are not symmetrical or perfectly timed; they are messy, adaptive, and shaped by feedback loops.
The UK government's new plan to foster innovation through artificial intelligence (AI) is ambitious. Its goals rely on the ...
Since its establishment in 2007, the Voyages of Discovery series has provided East Carolina University students with guest ...
As a health promotion specialist with Student Health and Wellness Services, Seeley is dedicated to helping Brown students ...