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Professor Devin Narr helps Lea Michele trace her lineage
Actor Lea Michele traces her family with the help of Sephardic studies professor, Devin Naar on TLC's "Who Do You Think You Are?"
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Japan looks set to dominate 'newspace' in Asia; India, China in play
Newer, smaller, and potentially transformative businesses are today bringing forth what can best be described as a revolution in space affairs.
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The new urban agenda needs to tackle water discrimination
Ph.D. student Tracey Chaplin published a collaborative op-ed discussing sea level rise, superstorms and drought, and the potential to decouple water rights from tenancy.
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What really kept Alexander Hamilton on the $10 bill
Scott Montgomery analyzes public pressure on the U.S. Treasury to reverse an earlier decision to keep its own founder, Alexander Hamilton, on the $10 bill.
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UW experts call Paris climate agreement ‘bold,’ ‘encouraging’
World leaders gathered in Paris in December to forge a global agreement to limit planet-warming carbon emissions.
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Russia: a global energy powerhouse that’s much more than a petro-state
Jackson School faculty member Scott Montgomery says Russia is not what you think.
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Can the U.S. and Russia avoid an Arctic arms race?
Professor Vincent Gallucci writes in The National Interest about the growing tension between the U.S. and Russia in the Arctic.
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Facing armageddon in South Asia
Jackson School alumna Hannah Haegeland discusses the risk of more bloodshed between Indian and Pakistan.
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India’s nuclear dangers
Alumna Hannah Haegland talks about India's responsibilities as a nuclear state.
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U.S. taps Silicon Valley to bolster military space power
The United States is the world’s leading military space power. But the future of that status is not assured in an era characterized by a return to competition from Russia and China. -
Benjamin Lee selected as Carnegie Junior Fellow
Fellows conduct research , co-author journal articles and policy papers, participate in meetings with high-level officials, contribute to congressional testimony, and organize briefings. -
Myanmar Goes Mobile, with UW's Help
With Myanmar's transition to democracy, access to information has surged. UW helps Myanmar's citizens navigate this new reality.
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Are we losing our religion? Searching for spirituality in Seattle
What does religion mean to 21st-century Seattleites? James Wellman, professor and chair of the Comparative Religion Program at the UW, shares his thoughts.
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UW increases focus on Indigenous knowledge
The UW is ramping up Indigenous learning across campus.
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Faculty Profile: Madeleine Yue Dong
The Whole U profiles Madeleine Yue Dong, chair of the Jackson School's China Studies Program. She talks about reconciling the many facets of modern China.