We’ve all been there: You’re talking to someone—maybe a relative or a neighbor—about politics. Your face gets flushed. Your hands start to shake. You can’t believe anyone could possibly be so thickheaded. Matthew Koschmann, associate professor in the Department of Communication at CU Boulder, knows all about those difficult kinds...
Colorado’s burgeoning role in the quantum revolution was in the spotlight as U.S. Deputy Secretary of Commerce Don Graves made an official visit to CU Boulder and JILA, a joint institute of CU Boulder and the National Institute of Standards and 技术.
If there’s anything that unites humans, it’s kicking back with a cool pint, 特拉维斯·鲁普说, also known as the “Beer Archaeologist.” He weighs in on the age-old practice in the inaugural edition of CUriosity, a new series from 今天的科罗拉多大学.
Associate professors Angie Chuang and Matthew Koschmann took part in a community roundtable to explore how we can stay good neighbors amid intense polarization.
Thirty years ago, Disney had grand plans to build a history-themed park in Virginia. But efforts to “Disneyfy” American history met staunch opposition, even in the halcyon 1990s. Read from CU expert Jared Bahir Browsh on The Conversation.
一个新的, wide-ranging exploration of human remains casts doubt on a long-standing theory in archaeology known as the Kurgan hypothesis—which, among other claims, suggests that humans first domesticated horses as early as the fourth millennium B.C.
一个新的ly amended law may push the country beyond what has been a drawn-out and sluggish process to account for the country’s civil war. Read from CU expert Tracy Fehr on The Conversation.