College of Arts and Sciences

  • 4 years after Climate Pledge, Amazon says emissions on the decline

    Amazon reported a slight drop in greenhouse gas emissions, but its total footprint remains millions of metric tons larger than past years, according to the company's sustainability report. Aseem Prakash, professor of political science and director of the Center for Environmental Politics at the UW, is quoted.
    07/18/2023 | The Seattle Times
  • Climate change is making mass seabird die-offs more frequent along West Coast

    A new study from the UW found that persistent heat waves in the marine environment linked to climate change are leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of seabirds several months later. Julia Parrish, UW professor of biology and of aquatic and fishery sciences and director of COASST and lead author of the study, is inteviewed.
    07/17/2023 | Oregon Public Broadcasting
  • Xiaodong Xu: Then and Now / 2012 Early Career Award Winner

    New electronic devices? New data storage methods? UW Physics & Materials Sciences Professor Xiaodong Xu studies the properties of single atomic layer semiconductors. He looks for new materials and new ways to control electrical conductivity.

    07/17/2023 | U.S. Department of Energy
  • Climate change is making mass seabird die-offs more frequent along West Coast

    A new study from the UW found that persistent heat waves in the marine environment linked to climate change are leading to the deaths of hundreds of thousands of seabirds several months later. Julia Parrish, UW professor of biology and of aquatic and fishery sciences and director of COASST and lead author of the study, is inteviewed.
    07/17/2023 | Oregon Public Broadcasting
  • Riots in France highlight a vicious cycle between police and minorities

    Calls to overhaul the police go back decades. But violent episodes of police enforcement continue. So do violent outpourings on the street. Magda Boutros, assistant professor of sociology at the UW, is quoted.
    07/17/2023 | The New York Times
  • Microsoft partner OpenAI reportedly under FTC investigation

    The Federal Trade Commission is reportedly investigating OpenAI, the Microsoft-backed startup that makes the smash hit ChatGPT. Emily M. Bender, professor of linguistics at the UW, is quoted.
    07/14/2023 | KUOW
  • Culture wars: How identity became the center of politics in America

    Identity - including race, sexual orientation, gender - have become lightning rod subjects of hundreds of bills in state legislatures across the country as Americans across the political spectrum seek to define the nation's values. Christopher Parker, professor of political science at the UW, is quoted.

    07/07/2023 | ABC News
  • Redlining continues to reverberate in Seattle nearly a century later in pedestrian deaths

    The decades-old government housing discrimination program commonly called redlining continues to shape which of Seattle's streets are most dangerous for pedestrians. James Gregory, professor of history at the UW, is quoted.

    07/06/2023 | South Seattle Emerald
  • Archaeologists do a reality check on Indiana Jones

    As the world's best-known fictional archaeologist goes after what may be his last ancient mystery in "Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny," new generations of real-life archaeologists are ready to dig in with 21st-century technologies and sensibilities. Sara Gonzalez, associate professor of anthropology at the UW, is quoted. Peter Lape, professor of anthropology at the UW, is referenced.
    06/30/2023 | GeekWire
  • The myth that men hunt while women stay at home is entirely wrong

    An analysis of foraging societies from around the world has found that women hunt in the vast majority of those looked at, confirming that the idea of gender division in providing food is a myth. Cara Wall-Scheffler, affiliate assistant professor of anthropology at the UW, is quoted.
    06/29/2023 | New Scientist
  • New faculty books: Story of oysters, Cherokee oral history, moral contradictions of religion

    Three new faculty books from the University of Washington cover wide-ranging topics: oysters, the moral contradictions of religion, and Cherokee creature names and environmental relationships.
    06/28/2023 | UW News
  • Researchers make a quantum computing leap with a magnetic twist

    A team led by scientists and engineers at the University of Washington has announced a significant advancement in developing fault-tolerant qubits for quantum computing. In a pair of papers published June 14 in Nature and June 22 in Science, they report that, in experiments with flakes of semiconductor materials — each only a single layer of atoms thick — they detected signatures of “fractional quantum anomalous Hall” (FQAH) states. The team’s discoveries mark a first and promising step in constructing a type of fault-tolerant qubit because FQAH states can host anyons — strange “quasiparticles” that have only a fraction of an electron’s charge. Some types of anyons can be used to make what are called “topologically protected” qubits, which are stable against any small, local disturbances.
    06/27/2023 | UW News
  • Nacogdoches artist to be featured in Washington D.C. ‘Women to Watch’ exhibition

    Arely Morales (MFA 2017) was selected to participate at the National Museum of Women in the Arts' Women to Watch 2024 exhibition in Washington DC next April. Also featured in a KTRE 9 article. 

    06/26/2023 | KTRE 9
  • Analysis: Biden and Modi talked about China but not about climate

    "The Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi was accorded a lavish welcome by the Biden Administration during his recently concluded U.S. visit. He spoke to the U.S. Congress, making him the sixth individual ever to address the U.S. Congress more than once...Why this courtship? For the U.S., India is critical to counter China," write the UW's Nives Dol?ak, professor of marine and environmental affairs, and Aseem Prakash, professor of political science.
    06/26/2023 | Forbes
  • UW team detects atomic 'breathing' for quantum computing breakthrough

    By studying the light atoms emitted when stimulated by a laser, they were able to detect vibrations sometimes referred to as atomic "breathing," a feature fundamental to nature's building blocks. The UW's Mo Li, professor of physics and of electrical and computer engineering; Adina Ripin, a doctoral student in physics; and Ting Cao, assistant professor of materials science and engineering, are quoted.
    06/23/2023 | GeekWire