Filter
  • Montage image featuring seven past presidents, from George Washington to Barack Obama.

    Is This Presidential Campaign Different?

    UW History professor Margaret O'Mara provides historical context for this moment in US presidential politics. 

    November 2024 Perspectives
  • Aerial photo of the UW quad in autumn.

    A Nobel, an Inventor, a Polymath & More

    Recent awards and appointments celebrate Arts & Sciences faculty and staff for their research, leadership, and more. 

    November 2024 Perspectives
  • Why Washington's statewide initiatives saw big shift in support

    A survey of voters in July showed approval of Washington's four statewide initiatives, including repealing the Climate Commitment Act and the state's long-term care program. Three months later and voters appear more likely to reject three of them. James Long, professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.
    10/28/2024 | KING 5
  • How much energy does it take to make a baby? Researchers are rethinking what they know

    Across the animal kingdom, models have vastly underestimated the energy costs of reproduction. Lauren Buckley, professor of biology at the UW, is quoted.
    10/24/2024 | Nature
  • ArtSci Roundup: November 2024

    ArtSci Roundup: November 2024

    From campus to wherever you call home, we welcome you to learn from and connect with the College of Arts & Sciences community through public events spanning the arts, humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences. We hope to see you this November. Election & Democracy Events November 7 | Trust on the Ballot: Voting in...
    10/24/2024 | UW News
  • UW historian on medieval European monsters, and the meaning of monsters

    Video: UW historian on medieval European monsters, and the meaning of monsters

    Charity Urbanski, a teaching professor of history at the UW, studies monsters and monstrosities in medieval Europe. One of her interests is the purpose monsters served for medieval Europeans, and what we can learn about medieval European society by looking at their monsters, which served as vehicles for expressing anxieties and fears.
    10/23/2024 | UW News
  • A look inside Puget Sound’s declining bull kelp beds

    Kelp has vanished from about 80% of the shorelines around which it once grew in Puget Sound, according to a 2023 report from Washington’s Kelp Forest Monitoring Alliance. Megan Dethier, a research professor of biology at the UW and director of the UW's Friday Harbor Laboratories, is quoted.
    10/23/2024 | The Seattle Times
  • Most and least politically engaged states in 2024

    The best way to stay engaged in the political process is to vote. But even with a record number of people voting in the last presidential election, we still only had a 66.8% turnout, unfortunately. Victor Menaldo, professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.
    10/22/2024 | WalletHub
  • War’s public health impacts are vast — tallying them is difficult

    New research is shedding light on how war inflicts mortality, displaces families and erodes mental health. Nathalie Williams, professor of sociology and of international studies at the UW, is quoted.
    10/22/2024 | Salon
  • Opinion: Hurricanes Helene and Milton should motivate us to bury power lines

    "Hurricanes Helene and Milton remind us of electricity infrastructure’s vulnerability to extreme weather events. However, at least one Florida community, Babcock Ranch, managed to avoid electricity shutoffs from downed power lines," write the UW's Nives Dolšak, professor of marine and environmental affairs, and Aseem Prakash, professor of political science.
    10/22/2024 | Forbes