International Affairs
- Alumna opened WINC’s doors in 2011 and has since trained thousands of women across the country in business
- Historian to speak at CU Boulder Oct. 23 on protests against growing control by China.
- Alumnus’ ski trip inspires an insight that could help give the world’s poor better vision.
- Her invention and new company, CatTongue Grips, was born because no other product offered grippiness without scratching
- A prominent member of the Irish government will discuss the impact of that “Brexit” in a presentation next week on the 鶹Ƶ campus.
- After spending considerable effort trying to stay in Boulder for the long term, Courtney Rowe has also found a way to leave a little bit of herself behind when she’s gone—long gone.
- AIDS has been a devastating plague in much of sub-Saharan Africa, yet the long-term implications for gender and sexuality are just emerging. AIDS and Masculinity in the African City tackles this issue head on and examines how AIDS has altered the ways masculinity is lived in Uganda—a country known as Africa’s great AIDS success story. Based on a decade of ethnographic research in an urban slum community in the capital Kampala, this book reveals the persistence of masculine privilege in the age of AIDS and the implications such privilege has for combating AIDS across the African continent.
- Benjamin Teitelbaum spent seven years researching the rise of the Sweden Democrats and the increased nationalism of the region. Teitelbaum is not a political scientist or geopolitical analyst. He is an ethnomusicologist.
- Without scholarships, a lot of ‘super smart’ students would not be able to attend or finish college, CU Boulder students and philanthropists note.
- <p>It was during a summer-long family trip to Europe that 13-year-old Mary Ann Casey cemented her career plan: diplomacy. "You embark overseas as a citizen of a single country; you return home as a citizen of the world," says Casey.</p>