Media Coverage

  • Telemundo logo

    Telemundo

    Enfoque California: El impacto del estatus migratorio durante una crisis de salud

    Associate Professor of Sociology and Global and Community Health Alicia Riley joined Telemundo’s Enfoque California program to discuss her recent research on how immigration status affected mortality rates during the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • The Guardian

    The Guardian

    Palestine Action ban is an attack on fundamental freedoms: letter

    Angela Davis, distinguished professor emerita at the University of California, Santa Cruz, coauthored a letter published in The Guardian condemning the UK government for designating Palestine Action as a terrorist organization, arguing that the move represents an attack both on the entire pro-Palestine movement and on fundamental freedoms of expression, association, assembly, and protest. 

  • Cosmos "C" logo

    Cosmos

    Mirror universe on the wall, is this where dark matter comes from after all?

    A physicist at the University of California, Santa Cruz has published 2 studies which put forward a new approach to explain where dark matter comes from. Professor Stefano Profumo has drawn from the well-established quantum chromodynamics. Additional coverage in Yahoo News, The Debrief, Science News Today, and IFL Science.

  • Times Of India

    The Times of India

    How the Bay Area is shaping the future of space exploration and why it should work with India

    UC Santa Cruz hosts a world-leading Department of Astrophysics, perhaps the best in the nation, and is headquarters for the University of California Observatories. The campus is a pioneer in adaptive optics and segmented mirror technology.

  • ABC News logo

    ABC News

    How beaches are affected by climate change

    “We know sea-level rise is happening in response to this warming. It’s widely understood through the observational evidence of what is happening,” said Patrick Barnard, research director for the UC Santa Cruz Center for Coastal Climate Resilience. “And now, we really need to move to thinking about solutions as a global community–and not arguing about…

  • Science

    Science Magazine

    Mysterious killer of sea stars finally identified

    It seemed to come without warning. In 2013, divers and marine researchers began to notice sea stars dying in droves in the waters off Washington state. The deaths were gruesome—arms became twisted and fell off, bodies disintegrated. “It was creepy,” says Peter Raimondi, a marine ecologist at the University of California Santa Cruz who followed…

  • LiveScience "LS" logo

    LiveScience

    ‘Hibernation genes’ help control metabolism and feeding – and could hold untapped benefit for humans

    Professor of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology Joanna Kelley commented on the potential applications of a new study. “It’s definitely not as simple as introducing the same changes in human DNA,” she said. “Humans are not capable of fasting-induced torpor, which is the reason why mice are used in these studies.”

  • San Francisco Chronicle

    San Francisco Chronicle

    Parts of Bay Area could experience longer earthquake shaking than previously expected

    Emily Brodsky, a professor of earth and planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz who was not involved with the study, commented on the importance of new findings about where earthquakes resulted in longer periods of shaking than expected. “When you actually have to build a building, you don’t want to just know, in general, it…

  • New York Times

    The New York Times

    A Bid to Undo a Colonial-Era Wrong Touches a People’s Old Wounds

    Anthropology Professor Dolly Kikon was part of a delegation of 20 Indigenous Naga leaders, elders and scholars that recently visited the Pitt Rivers Museum at the University of Oxford to advocate for repatriating the hundreds of human remains in the collection back to Naga ancestral lands on the Indian subcontinent.

  • Winnipeg Free Press logo

    Winnipeg Free Press

    Class action lawsuit shines a harsh spotlight on Manitoba’s use of solitary confinement

    Craig Haney, the plaintiffs’ expert and a psychology professor at the University of California-Santa Cruz, toured Manitoba correctional facilities. “In terms of harshness and the risk of harm to which they subject prisoners, (Manitoba facilities) rivaled anything I have observed in some of the worst solitary confinement units in the United States,” Haney wrote in a…

Last modified: Apr 02, 2025