COP must reverse rising pessimism over building sector decarbonisation
17 November 2022Social media engagement with climate policy events is vital to reducing building emissions and ensuring environmental justice, research led by Cambridge suggests
Social media engagement with climate policy events is vital to reducing building emissions and ensuring environmental justice, research led by Cambridge suggests
Using Artificial Intelligence (AI) to replace optical and mechanical components, researchers have designed a tiny spectrometer that breaks all current resolution records.
A Cambridge team frustrated by the apathetic response to biodiversity loss has developed a dramatic new way to highlight the demise of nature – and people are listening.
Four Cambridge undergraduates will become the first university scholars to receive support from a new global education fund created for talented Ukrainian maths and science students whose education has been affected by Russia’s invasion.
Water can be liquid, gas or ice, right? Think again.
New five-year partnership on the ‘Future of Work’ will examine the big issues affecting the modern workforce and offer practical, research-backed solutions to employers
What do we want from work - and how can we get it? Jennifer Howard-Grenville introduces the ̽»¨Ö±²¥'s new partnership with KPMG on the future of work, which will start by addressing mental wellbeing in the workplace.Â
Leaders in fields from chemistry to cancer research and computing are among the Cambridge academics recognised today.
Cambridge economists are at the forefront of a global movement to create new statistical methods that include vital components of prosperity – from nature to social bonds – currently absent from national accounting.
Fourteen-day quarantine measures imposed on incoming travellers returning to England in summer 2020 helped prevent the spread of the SARS-CoV-2 virus, particularly among 16-20 year olds, say a team led by Cambridge scientists.